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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-12-06 - Orange Coast Pilot! 7 er Liz's A:etions Critieized by TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 6, 1977 VOl.. 11, HO. Ml, J HCTICINS, • ll'A•U I 'Great Lady' I Student In Crash ··Succ11mhs .,,~ ELIZABETH TAYLOR WINS GREAT LAOY AWARD She Visit• San Juan Ho.ptal With Husband John Liz Criticized By Puerto Bicam SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) -Irate female senators criticized a ceremony at the Puerto Rican Le&lslature where actress Elizabeth Taylor up· staged eight other recipients of the 1971 "Great Lady Award." Miss Taylor and the eight Latin American women were rec· ognlzed by the legislature Mon· day. The l\ine women will receive the awards from the American , Women'sUniontoniaht. Following the ceremony at the • Le,ialature, three women ., Coas• Weather Fair throu1b Wednts· day. Lowa tonight In mid-SO.. HlCbl Wednesday 75to83. • senators 1ot into a heated dis· cuasloa with organben of the event, claUninl the other women bad been lpred wblle attent1oa was directed toward Ml11 Taylor, who wa1 to receive an award for civic work. "I am sorry that so many dis· tln1uiabed women have l>een ln· vtted here to give Importance to only one of them." uld Sen. M~rcedesTorres. Another senator. Ruth · Fernanda:, who hu a broken foot, at.mped her crutches on the •rountt, and Mid: ':The whole thlnl bas beea tactless.•• Sen. Celelte Beoit.ec nOdded bl aareemenl Steven Dave Swearingen, son of Saddleback College bead foot· ball coach Ken Swearingen, died Monday afternoon as a result of injuries he received in a single. car crash on Laguna Canyon Road Sunday evening. The 19-year-old Saddleback College student body vice presl· dent wu pronounced dead at Saddleback Community Hospital Monday, less Ulan 24 hours after his small sports car careened off the roadway a mile and a quarter east of EJ Toro Road. Police said Swearingen, of 888 Summit Way, Laguna Beach, pa11ed several slower moving cars going out the canyon road at abdut 6:~ p.m. Sunday, and ap- parently lost control of the small sports car when he returned to bis own lane. A pusenaer, Steven Desmond Wl111ams, 19, of 34592 Calle Paloma. Capistrano Beach, re· ceived minor in.hnies when the car slammed into an embank· ment and flipped several times. Sweartn1en was trapped un· derneath the enilne and police and firemen had to Uft the wrecka1e to extract the youth. The former Loa Alamitos High School student moved to La1u.na Beach with h1I tamlly a little more than a year .,o. H1a sister, Karen, ii a aenlor at Lacuna Beach Hl~ School. Saddl,bacll Colleae officials Hid that tbe YOUAI ID'an bad planJ1ed to play for h1I father next year. He wa1 a buslnen mljor at the col1e1e, played soccer. and was elected student body vice presi· dent earlier th1I year. WiWam Kelly, aaaoclate dean lor student affairl tnew Swear· mien iall hii life. • "l'Y• ISDOwn him for 19 years lite he WM a family member. It waa ~a gre~t deal more than Ute loN of a at11deiit body vice pnialdent." ,, Kelly and Ken Swearln,en were In tbi aervlce t.o&ether. oy, Eoffee Priees But St~ High Nothing Bight Bad Liiek Plague• Fire.men DELBARTON, W.Va. (AP> -Write it off as Just· a bad night for the Delbarton Volunteer Fire Depart- ment. Monday evening began with a call that a gasoline tanker was about to catch fire in a nearby com- munity. After the firemen jumped on the town's new rire truck, they couldn't get it started. So they boarded the department's older truck, and things were just dandy until they got to a crossroads. D~pite flashing lights and a wailing siren, the· fire truck collided with a pickup truck carrying mail from Charleston. After checking to be sure po one was injured. the firemen and their truck rumbled on to its call. But the driver oI the gasoline tanker-. who turned in the alann because the truck was smoking, told firefighters to forget about it. The smoke was coming from a jammed brake, be said. Truelcer a Bero Boy, 3, Rescued From River Death SALEM, DJ. (AP) -~menon Smalley •hnai• off the pratse from friends, 1'ayln1 anyone would have done Ute ••me. 9ut police say that lf it weren't for · himl a 3-year·old boy would be deaa. Smalley, '5, a drl•er for a loc.t propaneiatcom~~aacroa· In• Brubaker Creek & U.S. 50 at dusk Monday wben be aaw 1n Mormon .. .Abducted For Sex? 0 M<mJI won:U cannot quench looe nor can floodi drown U." .,. f LONDON CAP> -F.ormer American beauty queen Joyce McKinney was ordered by a magistrates' court today to stand trial on charges of abducting • youne Mormon missionary for whom she bas an ... u. consuming passion.•• Mils Mcltlnney, 21, of Asheville, N.C., appeared 1n the court In Epsom, so\lthwest ol London. weartni a pink dress and a white bow ln her blonde hair. She looked bewildered aDd red-eyed as the dec1a1on was an- nounced following extenslYd maglatrates' bearings. Much of her testimony cen- tered around llfe at B~ Youni Un.lvenlty In Utah. To stand trial with the Conner Mlu Wyoming·USA beauty con- testant la fellow American Keith May, 24, of Ma)'WOOd. Calif. The two were arrested Sept. 3) on cbaqes of forcibly abducting 21·:rear·old Kirk Anderson of Provo, Utah, imprlsonlng him against bis will ln a remote coun- try cottaie, posaesslng a fake re- vol v er and a bottle of chloroform. Anderson has charged that Stie kidnapped blm for ae•ual purposes. Mill Mcltlnney's attorney. Stuart EJcrod, SOU1bt diamilaal of the cue Oft IJ"OUDU that her motive wa11 "peltber hate nor anger but a ~eep.aeated and stn- cere love" toi'Andenon. Mias Jlcltluey wept as be , added: ''Mant words e Uot quencb IOVi*>l'ca Doodl ..WU it." He addit4 tUt althOujb UllOil6 wordl were wntten ~ooo ,.ra qo ttiey areutnlet.odai u &MIL. FoUOwt.q the maciltntea' • dllon that the patr would itand trial, Mi.ls McKinney ta tbo witness ltalld for the fint time and lold UM c:ourt: ''1 would lite to thank 10\I ao mucb for alvlntf m• th• OP· portunlty to •s>,eak. I have been. tryJ.n •• for t.bfte IDODlbs t.o -word to &» ~o world. l ,iru In areat fear that Kirk An• CSM PA&llON, faae Al) -- ~ .............. DAVID MANWARREN AND FAMILY POSING FOR CHRISTMAS TR!E FEATURE STORY Shotgun Blaats Wiped Out All But Victim•' Baby Son In Mlchlgen Tregedy Suspect Held In Slaying Of CdMMan Memorial services have been scheduled for Wednesday after- noon in Corona de! Mar for 21· year-old John Hagan who was stabbed to death this weekend in a park near Honolulu. Meanwhile the young man's al- leged assailant, Roger KuehJlau, 34, or Honolulu, was slated for ar- raignment today in Honolulu on a manslaughter charge. Kuehnau was arrested soon after the Corona del Mar man was stabbed several times dur ing a scuffle at a beach park about 30miles from Honolulu. The suspect is being held on $10,000 bail after he was formally charged in the case Monday night. Police say the youth had been campine at the park for about three weeks and apparently believed Kuehnau was responsi- ble for the theft or his camping gear. The stabbing allegedly oc- curred when Ilagan confronted Kuehnau and his 19-year-old brother-in-law. Police have re- fused to release the name or the brother-in-law because he has not been charged with a crime. Hagan, the son or Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hagan of 3007 Harbor View Drive, was a long-time Corona del Mar resident who at- tended Harbor View Elementary School, Lincoln Middle School and Corona del Mar fligh School. Services will be conducted at 2 p.m. al SL Mark Presbyterian Church, 2100 Mar Vista Drive. A 'amity friend, the Rev. George Vogel, willdelivertheeulogy. The family suggests memorial :ontr1butions in Hagan's name to he Corona del Mar High School 3oosters Club. DmnkArrest Said 'Cruel' LOS ANGELES (AP) -A chronic alcoholic who doesn't have a private home and has to :irlnk In public can claim cruel and unusual punishment If he ls ~rimlnally prosecuted, a ::iuperiorCourtjudge has ruled. . "For all practical purposes the, iefendant rttelves hia punish- ment before trial and the trial is 1rrele\lanl," Judge Harry Hupp ~ald Monday in an opinion on a ::lass-action suit filed by five coo- 11icted public inebriates. Hupp did not outlaw the arrest, mcarceraUon and trial of public :lrunkarda, but dld express dis- 1atlstaclioo with the facilities .hey are kept in while awaiUna rial. Tax Relief Bills SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. starts a series ot four meetlnes with leflslative leaders today on p~ posed tax relief bills. OtlAMOI COM'f 1 DAILY PILOT 3 in Family ~lwt To Death; No Clues BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (AP) -A week after David Manwar- ren was quoted as saying someone was "looking for us," he and two family members were found shot to death in their home, a Christmas tree overturned on the living room floor. His 11Ai· year-oldsonsurvivedunbarmed. Police s aid the body of Manwarren , a 22-year-old Christmas tree dealer, was on a bed when police arrived at the home. Festive Boats Sail at Dana Nearly 100 decorated boats are . ei<pected to participate in Friday and Saturday night's "Holiday Highlights," at the Dana Point Ha rbor. Well lil vessels will make two c omple te circuits of th e waterways in the Dana Marina beginning al 6 p.m. both nlehts, according to sponsors the Dana East Manna and Aventura Sail- ing Association. Prizes wUl be given to boat owners in the parade as well as the best dock-side vessels. H1a wife, Glenda, alao 22, and elder son, David Jr., 3, were on the floor near the bed. His baby son, Terry, was found by officers whoarrivedattbebome. The three victims had been killed by shotgun blasts fired at close ranae from a gun found on the floor. It waa not known when they were killed. Man warren hlld been in- terviewed by the BatUe Creek Enquirer and News Nov. 26 for a story on Christmas tree dealers. At the time, he reportedly told a photographer for the newspaper not to mention Im home address in the story because ''there are people looking for us." He did not elaborate and the address wu not used in the story. Officers said the bodies were discovered aft.er a relative called police because the famlly telephone did not answer. Prosecutor James Norlander said the only sign of struggle was the family Christmas tree over- turned in the living room. Norlander said no motive for the slayinp was known. In the interview, Manwarren described himself as disabled but did not say how he became dis- abled. He said be was selling Christmas trees this season for the first Ume. F,....Pa,,eAI PASSION TOLD ••• heavy pro~." She said the moel lmportanl commitment she made to An· derson was to give him her virtue. Recal.llne Andenon'a earlier testimony at the bearing, Miss McKinney said: "Kirk tries to say I tempted blm. He told Epsom police I was wearing a skin tight leopard's skin jump- suit. I had black Jeana with a puffy.sleeved top, which bas about as mucb 16' appeal u a potato sack. "Any physical desire I felt was an indirect result of the great spiritual and mental love I bad for him, a love be encouraeed," she added. "I cannot say I ever aot any pleasure out of ae~ual relations wltb Kirk. I was too busy trytn1 to satltfy blm." May's attorney Robert An· drew• said hla cllent did not belt•ve Andenoo,. detenttoa wu a kidnap, but rather "a rescue from an oppressive and tyfan· orsantzation" -the Mormon church -and that lt was nece11ary for Anderson's •ood - and bll Uf e. Ml11 McKinney traced An· derson to England tbrou1b private deteeUves and ~be and May are charred with tulq him to a lonely eotta1e near Okehamptoo lb Devon. a county in southwest En1J~~· . Anderson teatttted .be was eventuall,y •hackled to a double bed with a to.toot e"'1n and forced to have lntercoune three Umea wltb Ml•• McJClpney before be eventuall)' titlrplMd for bit releue atler three dl1S by pro~lg to surry her. Sick Pay Benefits Denied WASHINGTON (AP> Employers may deny prepant workers slck pay but cannot deny them seniority benefits dwiq thelr pregnancy leave, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. In its second major decision on preenancy in' year, the court re· lied heavily on ill prior ruling that denied women workers tbe right to have pregnancy benefits · includea ln an employer's health insurance program. But the justices drew a disUnc- tloo over seniority beneflts, cit- ina a difference ln "benefits" and "burdena." "Here, by comparison, the Nashville Gu Company baa not merely refu.ed lo extend to women a benefit that men cannot and do not receive but hat Im- posed on women a substantial burden that men need not euf • fer," Justice William H. Rehn· qulst said for the court. The court Mnt back to lower federal courts two pre1naocy benefit cases used to reach today's decllion, one from Ten· neuee and tbe other from Callfornla. Wblle the action won unan- imous approval by the nine justices, four or them 'voiced con- cern over the court's findJnl that the woman in the Tennessee cue failed to prove au lnitiaJ case of discrimination against her em ployer'11ick·leave polley. The women in the two cues de- cided today won victories in lower courts. Those victories were upheld u far u 1enlority benefits are concerned but now appear in jeopardy over their sick-leave claims. Nora Salty worked for the NaabvWe Gas Co.mpany for more than three years when abe became presnant In 1972. Sbe did not receive sick-leave benefits durtne her maternity. leave because company pollcy ex- cluded pregnancy as an "illness" covered by the plan. When Mrs. Salty was able to return to work, she learned that her job had been abolished and that she had lost seniority rights· to bid for another job within the company, Sonja Lynn Berl was a teacher in Richmond, Calif., and the sole support of her family when she became pregnant. She challenged the school board's authority to tell her at wbal sta1e in her pregnancy she would no longer be able to work and she also sued to collect sick pay. Rehnquist, referring to the court's decision last Dtt. 1 ln a case involving the General Elec· tric Company, said the "policy of not awarding sick-leave pity to pregnant employees ls leeaUy In· distinguilhable from the dlsabill· ty Insurance program upheld" in the GE case. ' Jn the GE case, the juaUca voted 6-3 that pre1nancy dis· crimination is not necessarily ll· legal discrimination baaed on sex. Fro. Page AJ HERO ••• after I cot out -uu I eot to the house and couldn't feel my feet or banch." He went to the hospital, was treated, then released. A report at Illinois State Police headquarters lo Effln1bam states, '"nlis would have bee!) a fatal accident except for t.h1f motorist.'' --------· ........ --.... ... .... - . ., . ...,.... BADLY BURNED BOY, 12, 'STILL A DAREDEVIL' Keith Hufln Attend• School With Face Covered Masked Kid Burn V"ictim Back ~ Sclwol EL CAJON (AP) -Wearlnc. mull t.bat conceal• bid~ burn acan. 12-)'ear-old Keltb HuUn l• back J.n scbool, 10 months alter a near-fatal aasolli>e expl0tlon. Some t.hlns• haven't changed. Keith ia back to ridi.QJ bis bicycle and practioln& tricks on hls skateboard. · • "KEITH'S PERSONALITY llASN'T cban•ed, .. aald h1a mother, Maxine Hulln, ''Ho's 1UU a daredevJI, just Jlke before." But other thine• are st.att.Unt1Y dllferent. Keith sitt In the clusroom weariD1 a special nyloa ·~~b stllt that preveata hll skin el'8ft5 from 1111.Lns and • helmet-like mask wblch covers a soft plastic shield molded to the contours ot btS face. Before Keith jotned bi.a sixth irade class at Tierra de.l Sol Junior Hilb Scbool, the school staff and doctors took care to prepare the other children to prevent taunUna remarks. ~ KEITH, THEY EXPLAINED TO cl~ssmates, had been burned in a gasoline explosion Feb. 18. He had been in hospitals for six months undergoin1 skin 1rafts. They tried to aet the students to underatand Keith's feeUngs and to realize how ln.sulta and ridicule could hurt him. When Keith took off the mask for a1rln1 and reve~ed the disrlgurlng scars, they encouraged classmates to aak questions instead of whlsperlog among themselves. "ApparenUy lt worked really beautlfully. He's been very well received," 1aid Dr. Saul Amerling, tbe school psychologllt. "WE'VE BEEN FRIENDS SINCE we were S or $ yean old," says Kevin Opheim, who alta by .Keith in school. "Wben the accident happened I wu tblnJclng, 'l sure don'\ want to lose him.• He•s 1Wl one of my best frtenda. 0 · Ou that February day, Keith tried to Ugbt a fire lD an under- ground fort with ga10Une. It exploded. Kelth ran outside and' scaled a five-foot fence to fall into a puddle of water, doUl111C the names enveloping his body. - He suffered third-degree burns over as percent of his body. Doctors aave him virtually no chance to live. · 0 TBE•E'8 NO WAY I CAN describe what he looked ute.n Mrs. Hulin said, "and I couldn't cry lo front of btm." ~ Last April, Keith wu transferred to the Shrine Bum Cebt.ei' in Galveston. Texas. He returned home Auf. 23 aft.er monlbl of pain. baths to remove dead akin. more operationl, more pain. He muat return to Galveston 6veey three montha for cbeckupa. And he faces other operaUona In wblch pluUc •v- eeona will work to reconatruct h11 burned body, tomet.titni be ii resiltin6 became be doelD't want to b& hurt any more. Actor Haggerty Out ~f Hospital. .I ( BURBANK (AP) -Dan ffaa· gerty, star of television's "Grizzly Adams," has been re- leased from a hospital where he was treated for bums suffered during his 36th birthday celebration. The husky actor portrays the lone mounmaln man in 'The • Life and Times of Ortuly · Adams." NBC spokesman Bud Tenerani said Monday that Haggerty is recoverin& at home from severe burns received when a flaml.ng cocktail sent by a friend splashed on hla beard dUJ'lDI the Nov. 19 celebraUoo at a restaurant in 'Woodland mu.. Water Rights WASHINGTON (AP) -'lbe • U.S. Supreme Court ql'ffd Man· day to 1etUe a dilpute over water n.hts between the federal gov- ernment and CallforJlia, a coo· troversy with ate.nUicant im_pact for 16otherWeat.mStates. WHEN YOU COMBJNE THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS-- THE RESULT~ SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES • By MICBAEL PASKEVICU Ot .. Oelly,.... ..... The Amel Development Com· pany bas dropped a $2.5 mUUon lawautl againat the North Oosta .Meaa Homeowners A11ociatlon as the two aldes move ela.w to • "reaoluUon'' that may keep a controvenlal nzone lnitiatlve off the March 1 elecUon balJot. The Costa Mesa City Council, .named in a s~nd •uit by Amel .Parents Demand Nativity By STl':VE MITCHELL Of Ille Oellt ,.....SUH More than 50 angry Aliso Elementary School parents con· fronted Principal Lyle Proctor Monday afternoon to ask blm why he pulJed a three-minute Nativity scene Crom the South Laguna scbool 's Dec. 13 Chrlstmu play. Aad before the hour-long meet· ing in the school cafeteria was over, parents had signed a peti- tion urdng reinstatement of the Bet.blefieni scene, and suuested they will seek legal recourse lo 1et the manger scene back in the yule play. "We were never told about this major (school district) policy change," said Vicki Regan, an Aliso School mot.her. "We've bad the Nativity scene for years. It's a historical and cultural scene - , not religious," she said. But Proctor said his recom- · mendation that the scene be pulled was based on what he calls the religious connotation of the segment. "It m~t aeem a contradicUon to be 'lblt to •lni 'Awa1 lD • Manger•:• but not to be able to 1, ' have a Nativity scene," Proctor told the parents. "The state EducaUon COde does say we may use that song.'' But, he said, the recommenda- tion that the manger scene be cut was based on what he called stipulations under the U.S. Constitution, the California Constitution and the state's Education Ct>de. SI'OCKS FA.LL; ' DOWLOSES14 NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices tumbled today under sell- ing pressl.&re blamed partly on the dollar's continued slump In foreign exchange mark'et.a. The Dow Jones averaee of 30 induatriall waa down 14.12 pointJ to806.91. Losers swamped gainers by a S·l margln among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. <Tables, All) . . ~ after councUmen placed the ln· JUatlve on th• ballot, h.s called a special public meetin& Thursday at 7 :~ p.m. in C01&11cil chall)bers. The meeting ii deai1oed for a recOQ4lderation o! the council ac- Uon tbat p~aced tbe lnltlaUve on the ballot. The council may remove the lnlUaUve from \be ballot lf the homeowners ae~ developers reach a reaolullon on the complex Issue. The now-defunct ault by Arnel agatnst•the homeowners stemmed from an assoclaUon ln- ltiaUve drtve that seeks to pre· vent a $30 mUUon ~ome and apartment complex planned by Arotl near South Coast Plaza. Besldea Amel 's " acres, the initiative would affect two adja- cent properties totaUnJ about 18 acrea. These propertlea are Out flf the Miaes Coal miners exit through the main shaft of the Bumit Mine in Appalachia, Va., after completing their regular shift, and they woe't be beck very aoon. 0v8l' 13!000 mi.o.ers in Virginia were honoring the strike called by Uie Unl~d Mine Workers. Story. P•J• A4. High Court Denies Pregnancy Sick eay WASHINGTON (AP) - Employers may deny pregnant worken sick pay but catmot deny them seniority benefit.a during their pregnancy leave, the U.S. Su,Preme Court ruled today. In lit aecond major deeialon on pregnancy ln a year, the court re· lied heavlJy on lts prior ruling that denied women workers the right to bave pregnancy benellts included ilf an employer's health lnsdrance program. But the justices drew a distinc- tion o\'er seniority beneClts, ell· Inc a difference in "benefits" and ''burdens." "Here, by comparison, the Nashville Gas Company bas not merely refused to extend lo women a benefit that men cannot and do not reeetve but has im· posed on women a substantial burden that men need not sul· fer," Justice William H. Rehn- quist said for the court. The court sent back to lotrtr federal courts two preenancy benefit caaes u1ed to reach today's decision, one f'rom Ten· nessee and the other from CaUfomla. While the action won unan- imous approval by the nine Justices, rour of then\ voiced con· cern over the court's fmdine that the womao in the Tennessee case failed to prove an ln1Ua1 cue ot dlscrlmlnalio" a1afo1t her employer's sick-Jeav~ p0Jlcy Tbe women in the two cues d• clded todJY won v-lc.torlea ln lower courts. Those victories (See BENEFITS, Pace A!) owned by Hobeit Wakeham and HenJ'y Phillipe. The homeowners have aou1ht to rezone tbe area In such a way as to allow only sincle-famlly homes on the parcelJ. The developers met Friday w ltb homeowners' represen· tatlves to dUcuas •tprovlsions" that could be placed by the homeowners on the develop· menta . Amone the po~ntlaJ provislons diJcussed ~ere ~ addillonal set- backs, hei&ht lJmitatlons, and landscaping reqtdrements. The poeait>Wty that a portion of Arnel's property mltht bo used for light commercial develop- ment was also discussed, accord- ine to one source. This SOU.fee, who asked t.bat hill name not be used, added that Arnel may be prepared to reduce Today's (;lo•l" N.Y.Stoeu the number of apartments tt tf*4 planned tor the site by about UO. The orilinal plans aubmlt.tedto and approved by the city couadl called tor 539 apartments and1128 homes. Arnel't su.lt acalnst the clt)" stUl stands and Is due for a hear- inl lo Superior Court on ~. 13. The suit questions the valldit~ ot the initiative which the council (~ ARNEL. Pace A.2) . !Jovan Slaying Trial Judge Nixes Death Penalty. Challenge By TOM BARLEY Ot .. °""' ,_,.... A defense chaUenae lo an Orange County Grand Jury in- dictment that "S~ka the death penalty for the alleged killer of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley waa struck down today ln Superior Court. Judge ffobert P. Kneeland ruled that the death penalty will stand in the cue against Jerry Peter Flori, 41, of Huntington Beacb, who pleaded not guilty to all cbargea today, Fiori, who ls belng held in t.be county jail with .ball denied, is * * * BJ JOANNE llBYNOLDS Ot .. o.My ......... Clairru.n. God's name is not 1t.1bJect to trademark laws, a spokesman for Govinda 's Restaurant in Laguna Beach Monday said the business will fi&bt a federal s uit pending apinstit. The ault was filed last week by the lnterdational Society for Krishna Consciousness USKCON) 111hlcti cJaJms to hold a ••rvlcemark to the name Govin· da. The suJt alleges that the rettaurant at 1150 S Coast Hiehway misappropriated the name. The le1at action was seen aa an attempt by the ISKCON hierarchy to disassociate tbelecl from the tour lndMduala named in the multlp)e criminal tndJct- m en ts ateirimanf from tbe murder of Stephen Jolin Bovan. Bo\oab, 36, of Fountain Valley died Ott. 22 when he waa shot nlne tltnea while leavlne anotber re1taurapt in Newport Beach. Four. ol t.be ei1ht people lndict- ed In that case were at one time associated with or members or the Lagun' Beach Hare Krlshna Temple. The four, Alexander Kulik, Roy Christopher Richard, Joseph Fedorowski and Joseph Davis Ill, were partners in a Deputy District Attorney Drie Carter said he hopes to hatt Davl• in the dran1e County Jill before mldnl&bl. Davi• was arrested ln 111· donesia last week. Three other persons named In the Grand Jury lndlctment ue aUU belne bun~ In what are described as "over- seas'' mu. All elght face charges of murder, conspiracy, extortl0n and robbery. Davis ls ident(Cied as a former member of the Hare Krishna movement. a sect that has (See DEATH, Page AZ) * * * Newport Beach investment rll'Jl\, Pruadam Diltributinf Interna- tional, Inc. CPDl). POI ls allo • named as a plafotiff in the ISKCON suit. (SeeSUIT, Pace A!) LB Crash Victim Dies of Injuries t' Monday, Jess than 24 hours after 'his small sports car careened oil the roadway a mile -.nd a quarte~ east Of El Toro Road. Steven Dave Sweartnaen, son of SaddJe'back Colle&e bead foot· ball coach Ken Swearin1en, died Mopday afternoon as a result of Injuries be received in a slnlle· car crash on Laguna Canyon Road Sunday evening. The 19-year-old Saddleback College student body vice presi· denl was pronounced dead at Saddleback Community Hospital Police said Swearingen, ot 888 Summit Wa)I, Laguna Be•ch, passed several slower moving cars going out the canyon road • about 6:45 p.m. Sunday, and ar>- parenUy lost control or the small sports car when be returned to his own lane. Lo~don 'Passion Trial' 'QEdered. LONDON (AP) -Former American beauty queen Joyce McKinney was ordered by a maelatrates' court today to •tacld Coast . lt." He added that pltltough tbioN worda were written 2,000 year. aeo tbey .,-e as true today•• thtm.• Folfowtna tbe ma1l1tratesjde: clJ)op, that the pair would alanel trial, Miss McKinney took the wltn~s stand tor th• first time and told the court: "I would like to thank yoiu ao m~~h !or aivlne me the op· portunity to apeak. I bave been ttylng for three months to aet ---···"". ~­~ .... ' .. , . "asked liid. ~ Viejo Couple Turn Stories Into Book. lliirii, V.-ietim llaek to School • EL CAJON (AP) -W'eari.iil a mask tbat COJlceala M4eoua bura acara, 12·)'ear·old Keith Hullo l• back bl 1chool, .10 months after a near·f atal luoline explosion. .. B1 WILLIAM DODGE OfU. o.6ly ...... ...,, It •tarted out the way 10 many treat 14eu do -over clrlnb and boiaterous sloryteUin1. But Mlaslon Viejo residents Robert and Nancy Wlngo were convinced Lbe stories they heard contained the tt.ulf of areal literature. Or, at the leaat. enter-tainin~g. So the two airline employees decided to write a book. ''Wben we atarted this project we expected to put it otit in two weeks," Wingo, an Air California captain, recalled of the couple's decision to write a novel about. an airline pilot. "It took us two years belore we finally 1ot it into draft form," Nancy Wingo confeaaed. "We d1dn 't know what we were lacinf so we look it step by step. ••we Just kept stumbling along until we got where we are now." But the road lo ou~Uc:atlon of •'Charley Potata 'a •°l -acheduled !or release ln two weeks-wasn't wttbout It.a own set of bizarre and humoroua occurrences. When the couple began lhe the project they hired a court re- porter to transcribe tapes of airHne atorytellin& sessions with .their friends In aviation. "When we put it OD paper it Mesa Council Backs Zone Change Pleas . ,..,..,.... TELLS OF PASSION Joyce McKinney Backed by requests from . homeowners near Bear Street and the Corona del Mar freeway, Costa Mesa City Councilmen vot· ed 3·0 Monday night to initiate a zoning change that would pre- vent commercial development on an undeveloped 3.S-acre parcel. Representatives of landowner William Cagney had sought a de· lay on any zoning decision on the commercially-zoned parcel at F,....PGfleAJ PASSION TOLD ••• paper covered in handwritten notes, the doctor's daugbtfr and on~·time model said she bas done voluntary work with deaf children and has produced a television documentary on drug addicts. She said after she became in· terested in the Mormon Church. because of a Mormon fa l'nily she knew with 10 children which "had love and laughter," she enrolled at Brigham Young University in Utah, where she met Anderson. "My s tandards were quite high," Miss McKinney told the court. "I had had problems in the past with boys who constantly tried to take my virtue. I don't smoke or drink or use drugs. I was looting for a boy who could read the Bible with me and have a family with me.'' But Miss McKinney sald she became disillusioned al Lbe uni· versity. "l was the ideal modern girl at BYU. 1 wanted a temple mar- riage -a marriage for eternity ... She said her fe male col· leagues. however, "drank and had pictures of nude boys on the wall. 1 didn't expect this at all. They were wolves. I was In a state of cultural shock. I prayed for a very special boy who would come Into my life and that is where Klrk comes in." She said she met Andenion in July 1975 in Provo, Utah, because· she had a sports car and he want· ed to drive it. "We stayed together all ntfhl," said Miss McKinney. "We found we had a lot in com· mon. He was willing to talk wiLb me about the church but he also be1an talkine of love and mar· ria~e immediately. ' 1 would like to say he did not propose marriage to the car-he pl'oposed marriage lo me," she' t~ld the hush ed, packed courtroom. ~be said I.he couple even chose names tor their future children and when she asked Anderson whether he could sup}>Ort her, she quoted him as respOndlng: "Honey, I would work five Jobs lo support you.'' rTo a woman thla means' aotnet.blng,'' the petite defendant aa\d aottly. •'These are pretty 1)ldavy ptom.laea." pbe aatd the most important cormltment 1be made. to An· derson was to give him ber virtue. Recalling Anderson's earlier testimony at the heartni, Miss McKinney said: "Kirk tries to say I tempted him. He told Epsom police I was wearing a skin tiJ(ht leopard's skln jump- suit. I had black jeans with a puffy-sleeved top, which has about as much sex appeal as a potato sack. "Any physical desire I felt was an indirect result of the great spiritual and mental love I had for him , a love be encouraged," she added. "I cannot say I ever got any pleasure out of sexual r elations with Kirk. I was loo busy trying to satisfy rum.•• May's attorney Robert An· drews said his client did not believe Anderson's detention was a kidnap, but rather "a rescue from an oppressive and tyran· organization" -the Mormon church -and that. it was necessary for Anderson's good - and his life. Miss McKinney traced An- derson to England through private detectives and she and May are charged with taking him to a lonely cottage near Okehampton in Deton, a county· in southwest England. Anderson testified he was eventually ..shackled to a double bed with a 10.foot chain a.nd forced lo have intercourse three times with Miss McKinney before he eventually bargained for bis release alter three days by promising lo marry her. "'At times you may have thought in the la.st three days there was an air of unreality in the court In that it almost seemed to be a local American domestic situation," defense attorney El- grod told the maptrates. '"This muat be the moat amazing non- kidnap story one has beard for manyyeara." F,.._PageAI DEATH ••• liaured prommenUy in police ln- ve.Uaauoo of what ofllcen 111 Is an lntmiaUon•l dn.tJ dlstrlbot- Jn1 rtna centere 1n Or41n1e County. the comer or Bear Street. and Yukon A\tenue. Howeve r, city councilmen followed a planning staff request to zone the area to allow single- f amUy homes only. Councilmen Ed McFarland and Jack Ham- mett, who are attending a Na-· tional League of Cities con- ference in San Francisco, missed the meeting. Monday's decision, which must go back to the city Planning Commis&ion before final council action, would allow developers two options regarding the parcel: -Construct s ingle-family horn es on 6,000.square·foot lots. -Develop smaller patio homes on 4,SOO.square-foot lot.s.at a maximum den:1ity of 1.9 homes per acre. Although the developers bad not presented any proposals to the city, homeowners said they would prefer patio homes to any type of commercial development on the site because of increasing ' traffic in the area. The decision also initiates a zoning change from agricultural to recreational on 8.5 adjacent acres which are now being de- veloped as Shiffer Park. TONIGHT "BEHIND THE HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T. Brown lecturer, OCC Forum, 7:30.p.m. SOUTH COAST REPERTORY THEATER -"Knights of the White Magnolia," Tuesday- Sunday through Dec. 18, 8 p.n:i. WEDNESDAY, DEC. 7 OCC LECTURE -"How lo Plan and Pres ent Special Events," Fin4:Arts ll9, 7:30p.m. E'.-...PageAl SUIT ••• Davia, the owner of Goviiida's, is currently being brought to Orance County from Jakarta, In-donesia. Monday, Peter Reinbold~ whose Hindu name is Pad~· na1erbha Daa, called the Daily Pilot to say the restaurant would fight the suit. "Therefore, we, the servants or. Govinda refuse to partake in IIKCON's attempt to limit God lo being a trademark." Relnboldt did agree with the contention of the ISKC(>N of· ficiala that the restaurant is in no way connected lo the sect or Lbe Laguna Be._ch temple. He sald adverse publicity re· 1ardln1 PDI and the murder caae forced the restaurant to close temporarily. but it re- opened Frl~y. He said some ol. tbe restaurant employee have quit because of the publicity about the cue. Jhlnholdt, who described himself u tbe rnanuer aad legal represent.alive of the restaurant, claimed the suit. la in contradlc· tlon to the sect'• teachings. He said be lan't. a member of the Laiuna Be1cb temple, bat nld he ii "a member oUbe Hare Krlshna mOT mtnt. •• was all unlntelU&ible Jibberlah." said Mra. Wln10, a United Airlines atewardeu. ''It waa almoat lmpoulble tO ~nderatand even for her (the tran1eriber ). " . Part of the tranacrlptlon's problem evolved from the rqwar drawbacka of record~ converaa· Uon. , "The voice on the tape would say 'Thia bJI' and we were a.sk- in& ourselves 'How ble ls that?'," Mrs. Winco explaJned, 1e1turtnc around an imaclnary object with her bands. "There wu so much lost between the actual convena· lion and the tranacripUon., "And Lbe tape had all klndl of •you knows' on It," Wtn10 added. The couple Junked the . transcription idea and decided to begin wri~ dUferent aloriea and pieclna them lo&ether. "We bad lo make it up and piece it together 10 it would seem real," Mrs. Wlnao explained. ·'When you tint write lt all down • U comes out so choppy. "We rewrote lt so often 1 wu alck ofit." And there were spellinl prob- lems. "Our 1pellln1 waa so bad there were th:nea we couldn't find words in the dictionary," Mn. Wineo recalled lau1hln1ly. The CQUple peniated and final- ly produced a ma(\uscript. Then, t.be 10111 search for a publlaber bet an . "We sent the manuscrtpt lo 12 publish~' Mrs. Wln10 said. "About ol them were H)'inl lo return the book next year. They said they already bad all their titles for this year.•• "We were 1ettin1 pretty dis- couraaed," her butband re· c1Ued. "We finally found a p~bllaber in FaUbroot who said the book wu aellable but too ril- Some things ~ven "l chanced. Keith ..a. beck to rid.Ills bia bicycle and practlcln• trtckl oo h1a &Uteboard. • ..KllTH'S PERSON ... LITY HASN'T chanced,'' Hid bis mother, Maxine HuJln. ''He'• stnl a daredevil, Ju1t llke bl(Ore." .,,. But othet-t.binp are 1tart.lln1t1 dltterent. Keith aUa In the cla11rooa1 wearing a Spetial nyloo 1tretcb ault that pn\'enta hla •kin graft.I from satrtlinl and a helmet-like muk whJch coven a loll plasUo shield molded lo the conloun of h1I face. Before Keith JQlned hia a1xth 1rade clua at TJerra ~· Sol Junior Wgh School, the school staff and doctors. look care to prepare the other-children to prevent tauntlrw remarb. KEITH, TREY EXPLAINED TO clu1mates, bid been f>urned In a gaao1lne explosion Feb. 18. Ue bad beeis in bospltela Jat six mont.U under1olni a.k.isl 1ratta. Tbey tried lo get ~he atudflnts lo understand Keith'a feellncs and to rulbe how insults and ridicule could hurt him. • Wheit ·Keith took off the mask for ilriAI and rtvealed lhe · dlaflcurioi scan, they ccou.rececl claftmatea to uk queatioa.s Instead ol ""1.sperinf amonc themaelvea. ••Apparet1tly it work9C1 really beautllul{y. He's been very well received,•• aald Dr. Saul Amerlloc, the school psycholoelat. '1WE'VE BEEN F81END8 SINCE we weN 5 or G ye~ old/' sQI Kevin Opheim, who sits by .Kelth tn school. "Wilen the aeddent' .happened 1 wu thinkin1, 'I sure don't w~t lo lose .him.' He,1 still one of my best friends." • On tbat February d•y, Keith tried lo li1ht a fire ln an under- ground fort with 1aao11ne. It exploded; Keith r1d outside and scaled a five-foot fence to fall inlo a puddle or water, dousing the flames enveloplne hi. body. He auffered Ullrd-de1ree burns over 8S percent of his bQd.y. Docton eave him virtuall)' no chance to live. . "THERE'S NO WAY I CAN describe what he looked like," Mrs. Hulin said, "and I coUldcl't cry in front of him." Last April. Keith was transferred lo the Shrtne Burn Center in Galveston. Texas. He returned home Aue. 23' 'after months of pain, baths to remove dead akin, more operatlona, more pain. He must return to Galveston every three months tor checkups. An4 be faces other operaUoos in which pluUc .sur- geons will work to reconttruet hla burned body, somethlnl be ia resisting because he doesn't want lo be hurt any more. que for him." · Finally, the couple's novel WIS accepted by ExpoalUon Presa ot New York. They didn't realize the extent of their accomplish· ment until they loured tbe preu back eaat. "We went back to New York and toured the plant." Wln10 ex- plained. "They have a whole warehouse of manuscripts they've turned down.'• S~r,vie.es Schedu.ed For Stab~ing Victim But. the Wln1os' novel -paf.t terned after the experiences o( one or captain Wlngo's felJow Air California pilots-was accepted. While the couple has scheduled an autographing session Dec. 17 at B . Dalton /Pi c kwick Booksellers in South Coast Plaza neither is predicUn1 inst1nt auc: cess for their first. writing en-deavor. ·'I think everyone who writes a book hopes it will become a best· seller," Wingo admitted. "Un· less ll 'a a tremendous best selfer you don't make much money and mostly it's authors with a name who make it. ''But authou do have something that'a almoJt. Im· mortal,'' he continued. "How many people actually do gel a book published." . OZ4RK CR41Rs MADE TO L4SI' Charles Christian and Jack Mccutcheon make chairs. But the way they mate chairs is as old as the Ozark hUls that sur- round them. They use bO nails, screws or .glue to hold them tosether yet no chair bu ever been returned for repair. l'or a modern ,tory by Jules Lob on anel~nt cfafl. see PaeeA10. Memorial services have been scheduled for· Wednelday llfter· noon in Coronavdel Mar for 21- year-old John Jfaian wlio waa stabbed lo d'ath this weekend in a park near Honolulu. MeanwhUe the young man's al- Je1ed assailant, Roser Kuehnau, 34, of Honolulu, WIS alated for ar· raignment today in Honolulu on a manalaughter charge. Kuebnau was arrested aoon after yie Corona del Mar man wu stabbed several Umea dur- ing a scuffle at a beach park about 30 miles from Honolulu. The suspect is belni held on $10,000 ball after be waa formally charged in the case ?donday ni1tbt. F,..,.PageAJ ARNEL ••• placed ontbe March 7 ballot. However, now that Amel has dropped Its suit 11alnat the homeowners, City Attorney Robert Cantp•an• admitted that a new tot has been added lo the issue. During Monday nitiht'a council meetlng, Campa1na said all aides "generally qree that there should be a way of resolution.•• ''In essence, bow do we tum off the bubble macbtne that started by placing the lnWaUve on the ballot," said Campaana. Spokesm_en for •ll aides today •topped short or H.Ylnt a com· promise was in the works. Police say the youth bad been camping at the park for about three weeks and apparently believed Kuebnau was tesponst. ble for the ~eft of bis campln& gear. The stabbing alle1edl:y oc- curred when Hagan Cl>Jlfronted Kuehnau and bis 19-year-old brother-in-law. Police bave re-1 ru.sed to release the name of the • brotber·in·law becad6 be bas not been charted wttb a trime. Haaan. the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hagan ol 3007 Harbor View Drive. was a Jong-time Corona del Mar resident who at- tended Harbor View Elementary School, Lincoln Middle School and Corona del Mar High School. Services will be eondu~ied et 2 p.m. al St. Mark Presbyterian Church, 2100 Mar Vista J>rlve. A family friend, the Bev. Geor1e • Vogel, willdeliverlheeulogy. The family suggests memorial ' contributions ln Haian's name to the Corona del Mar Hi&h School Boosters Club. Prisoner Swap MEXICO CITY (AP) -U,S. maaislrates have beaun ln- te r v iewin& 235 American prlsonen 1n Mex.lean jail& to de- termine if tbey are eUcible t.o .-. / turn home under a new ex· , change procram and whether · they want to ao. The first • planeload is to leave Mt1ulico€'aty on Friday. J .. WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS-- THE RESULT~ SPEAK FOR THEMSEL YES. Fairview ~ides' POsitioris t 81.IAOOS HYMAN °' -o.ny .... Malt P 1yebla.tr10 tecbnloians at· Falrvlew State HCMapitai in Co.la Me11 said today they are pleased with a State Department or Health decision Monday to drop a highly controversial reor1anba· lion or 1\ale hospital supervliory poaltlona. He'alth olflclals, who met with members of Governor Edmund G. ltrowri Jr.'a •tarr Monday in Transit 1=Bxity Assailed Or,nge ~ty Transit District (OCTD) officials were told in no uncertain term. Monday to im· prove their control or district fixed aaseta and to immediately inventory OCTD property. A"ll aµdlt of OCTD operaUons by county Audltor·Controller Vic Melfi\ said that while federal reg. ulatlons require OCTD to inven· tory lta propercy at least once every two years, it has been more than three years since the last inventory. The inventory regulations are imposed by the federal Urban Mass Transportation Ad · ministration, the agency which supplies up to 80 percent or the purchase cost for most OCTD as- sets. Directors ordered OCTD of· ficials lo prepare an inventory or assets and a response to other areas or Heim ·s audit within JO days. Heim noted that only 13 of 80 assets randomly selected for testing could be located and positively identified. Twb forkliets valued al $11,595 each and a $1.471 floor drill press were listed among the missing items, county officials said. In ad~Uon, a $630 movie pro· jector along with desks and chairs valued at $100 lo $400 could not be identified, they continued. They noted. however. that the 80 items were selected simply as a test ... This is not meant to imply that some or or all of the asseli. were missing,·• Heim said. But the items Just could not be positively identified or located because or insufficient record· keeping or because assets ac· quired the past year have not been tagged with 1dentiflcali0ft numben.~lmsald. He noted that district officials now are in the procesi. of updat· ing records and tagging assets with identification numbers . OCTD General Manager Ed Lorit.z said today he doubts that anr. forklifts or other major items really are missing. He aafd ocrD orrtclals have be~n overhauling inventory management the past several mon~ and would have all items retagged and invehtoried with.in 30days. The audit also disclosed that some assets had been moved from their designated locations without proper aulhoritiy and contrary to foderal regulations. As a result, the auditor, controller recommended ·that a written procedure be established govetning the transfer of asset..s that are purchased with federal grants. Helm also called for investiga· lion or discrepancies in fu el mven· toryrecordseach month. For example, he reported, the district had more than twice the amount or diesel fuel on hand -at the end of the last fiscal year than record books indicated and 20 percent less motor 011 than on inventory records. Helm -also suggested that authorization for overtime be done ln writing in advance or the overtime being workj?d .... Brown Criticized RIVERSIDE CAP>-Universi· ty of California President David •Saxon said that Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. is "not as sym· pathetic" lo the university "as he oupttobe." Sacramaito, aa.ld they had been overly strict in t.helr lnterprela· uon of federal standards. The reoraantutlon would have aub1tltuW nlW po1IUon1. open only to registered n\,lrlea, for the preaent ruinln, cootcllnator poal· tlon, open o nurses and paycblatriotec~cJana. · f'alrvte~ tectmtotan1 lut week ~ta1ed a 2+hour sick•in lo call slates ofOcials • attention Lo their objectloos. Tecbnlciana at Pacific State Hospital in Pomona alto 1U.yed home that day in pro- test. •'So far, so 1ood," said Fairview tecbnlclan Cathie Joy of M onW's dedalon. • 'J( 's a 1tep ln the rteht dlretUon. As fa{ ~ we 're concerned, as long as th!n11 progress aa they say they wlll, w~ have no qualins qalnst what '11otni on." Dr. Francis Crlnella, Fairview el'ecutive director. explained Four Escape Beotia Santa Ana firemen struggle to free Paula del Cid, 28, Santa Ana. from wreckage of auto that was hit by slow moving freight train about 4 p.m . Monday near Halla· day and Adams streets in Santa Ana. The woman was seriously injured and it took rescuers 40 minutes to get her out of the smashed car. However, three other persons in the car, including a two-month-old child, were only s lightly injured, police s aid. DA · Fights to Keep 'Sam' Trial in NY NEW YORK (AP> -Brooklyn District Attorney Eugene Gold is fighting to keep the trial of al· leged "Son of Sam" killer David Berkowitz from being shifted, saying publicity surrounding Ute case has been intense every. where. Pearl Harl>or Rites Slated Memorial services for shipmates and 811 other military personnel who died 3$ year'$ ago Wed.nes· day morning when the Japan~ forces attacked Pearl Harbor are scheduled in west Orange County. "The 38th ann1venary ob· servation will be staged at the main gate of the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Sta· lion at 9:30 a.m., according Oranae County officers of the Pearl Harbor survivors Aaaoeiatlon. ' The JDaln gate ceremony will be at Seal Beach Boulevar4 and Forrestal A venue accordln• to Orange County Chapter 14 spokesman F .E. Shrader, Of Los Alamitos: Filln& papers Monday to op- pose a defense motion to move the trial lo an upstate court where publicity was not as widespread, Gold argued further that publicity appears to be an expression or "curiosity and in· terest, not prejudice and pre- disposition." Berkowitz has been ruled com· petenl lo stand trial in slate Supreme Court In Brooklyn on a murder charge in the slaying of Stacy M06kowitz, 20, the final victim of the killer who adopted the name ''Son of Sam" and used a .44.caliber handgun in his nighttime attacks. Berkowitz bas been indicted for all 1tr slayings, but court ac- Uon in the other cases tias been shelved pending the outcome of the proceedinlS ln Brooklyn. Jn another development, The New York P-ost on Monday print· ~ picture. of Berkowlta in bis prison cell lo the psychiatric wing of Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn. State Supreme Court Justice Joseph Corso, the presiding Judie lt\ the case, reportedly was angered by publication of the· photos. But he said that "under' rules of propriety" he would not comment ol'l whether Post publication of the pictures violat.· ed bis order f orblddlng publicity· in the case. He alao declined co~ment : when asked If he would act in the matter. 1 Caseloads larrease Orange County workers who 1ather child support payment& from abeent parents collected $8.G tor every $1 1p1nt in their etrorta, accordln1 to a recent Orance Count)' Grand Jury audit. that the dedslon will permit technicians to continue in s upervisory positions in in· termed.late care facililles. In skiUed nursinJ units, thote in charge will continue lo be rel· islered nurau. he said. Psychiatric technicians are specially trained to educate the developmentally disabled, such as the retarded and physically handicapped patients at Fairview, rather than to ad- Pea Soup Covers County Dense fog that closed down nights al Orange County Airport and backed up freeway traffic this morning is expected to con. tinue Wednesday and possibly for as long as a week, weather of· fic:lals said today. However, some lifting is ex· peeled Wednesday, wlth the re· suit that fog will be dense in in· land valleys and lighter along the co:ist, reported National Weather Service meteorologl.sl John Henderson. He said the fog. which 1s not UD· usual for this time or year, ls the result or a low inversion layer of warm air that acts as a cap to the colder air below. The layer has been varylnr between the surface and 1,000 feet, with no strong winds to blow it away, a South Coast Air Quall· ty Management District spokesman said. He said that, also due Lo the in· version layer, pollution levels were above normal today lllld will probably continue that way all week, with ozone values ln the .15 lo .18 range. There Is a slight possibillty ?hat the ozone values could rise Lo .20. a stage one smog alert, the spokesman said. The California Highway Patrol reported a large number or acci· dents due to fog, with traffic backed up on all major freeways due lo both fog and accidents. Extra driving time should be allocated for getting lo work in the morning while the fog con- tinues. a CHP spokesman said. Flights out of Orange County Airport were canceled early t,o. day. ~ifb passengers being bused lo Ontario Aln>Qrt arr hour away, an Air Csllfornla spokesWOt"ltan said. Air travel was expected to re· sum~ by mid-morning. Airport Committee Will Meet Tonight Members of the South Orange County Airport Committee will conduct a meeting tonight at 7:30 to discuss new developments ln the search for another south Orange Coastai~rt. The meeting wUl take place at Capistrano Unified School Dl.s· trict offices, 32972 Calle Perfecto in San Juan Capistrano. Durante Treated LOS ANGELES (AP) -Enter· tainer Jimmy Durante waa ll'eat· ed and released from UCLA Medical Center after he re· portedly choked on food, a spokesman said. . It It gtft giving IMIOn again and what better gift for friend or f amlly than fin• • Jewelry ••• th• IHtlng gift • • • for a lltetll'N and JonQer. 1t'1 a~ of your af• tectlon or •teem that c.n be helrtoom.d wen beyond tn. ..,.,.. of one Ill.Um.. A Mii ~ gift of fine t-Mlry hu the elem.nt of permanelfc• that exCMds any othet. The old aaytng 0 Nic. thlngt conw In an.II peckagetl." le oertalnty tn"; ...,.clalty If t"-Y bHr the CharlH H. Barr Jtwtltt1 lat>.I. Al Certified , Gtmologlaw and A.gi.tered ~ of the Amlrtcan Gem 6oc:lety .. '*" "" -~ .. • to ldvlM )'()\I f'tOll'dlng your pure~ of oemato• •nd • tlpa ~. w. hM • wldt Mlectlon of gem• from th• moat ewotJo to the more f..Wtl• vllfttl-. And ••ldng of "famlllat." 1tn•t It ""' to .nos> "1tWa you • TU!!d!y. Oeoembet 0, 1177 minlet r apeclfiCalJy medical care. "I really do think this represent• a turnaround for Fairview.'' Or. Crinella sa.ld of Monday's detlalon. The contro\>eraial reorganisa· tlori wu pa.rt of a state effort to recapture federal funds cut off aft.er Fairview Ctnd three other state hospitals were d~rtlfled Jaet summer by a slate licensing team under contract lo the U.S.- ( DAIL y PU.OT Al •• Department of Health, Educa- tJon and Wellue. The tta&e 11 cu~nUy makinl up lost fundl of SS00,000 per month to l'alrvlew i.lone. Officlata are conUnuln1 wt.th other mov• to retain etitltlca· tJon, lnchadlhf addbis ~l'IOPQel. Dr. Crinella eald Fairview la ~c· lively aeekllll l'tllltend nunes. licensed vocational nurses and psychiatric teehnlclana to fW 200 Job open.lqa. ' I J I I · Af'_,..,.... PEDESTRIANS BATTLE RAGING BLIZZARD IN BUFFALO ; , Ohio, Pennsylvania Al10 Le1hed by killer Snow1torm ... Killer SJWwstorrii Caiaes 11 Deaths By Tile Alsoclated Preas A severe etprm caused the deaths of at le.a.st, 11 people in three states, but appeared to be easing today. Travel remained hazardous iD maQ.Y'areas and the National Weather Service said up to an additional five inches or snow miibtrall. The storm, swept out of the Mid west by bllh winds Monday, brought up to 1S inches or snow to some Northeast states. Six deaths were aUribuled to the storm in New York, two in Pen· naylvania apd three in Oblo. Most were heart attack victiins shovel· ing snow or those caught in traffic a~cidents on slick .roads. Snow fell on a line extending from northern Michigan through northern Pennsylvania and into northwestern New York and New England. The storm did ndt hit tbe New York City area. Six to seven inches of snow were reported from St. Louis across Illinois, Indiana and into Ohio. Maine. Vermont and New Hampshire bad up to six inches by early today. Western Mbsachusetts bad up to two in· ches of snow and the Boston area received about two inches before thesnowchanged to rain. The storm (otced the closure of BuUalo international Airport OJl, '. Monday, while nt,UDerous fliebl.ti,, at H•ncock lnt.ernat.ional ~ ~ in Syracuse and at Albany Airport were canceled. But air traffic at the a1rporta was repo~ ed returnlng lo normal today. Eleven inches of snow was re- ported at North Creek, in the Adirondacka, and in Rochester. Buffalo bad 10 inches; Albany, Binghamton and Syracuse 9; and Utica and Elmira 8. ' Hundreds of schools In sections or New YOl'k were closed earbc. .. Monday and remained cl0&ed ta, . day. . •• Ln Vermont, the weatbe~. service said about a foot of sno~ .. , fen in some secUons of the state..,, Eight inches fell at Burlingq and Montpelier and a foot of ID01f waa reported throughout tbA11 southern part ol the atate. Some•,. schools were closed. · In southern Maine, up to Dlne inches of snow fell and the , weather service said th• northern part of the state could. expect up to 10 inches u th& ·. storm veered north. . The northern storm came - nearly three week weeks before the official besJ.nniDI of winter Dec. 21 and barely a week after• late November storm brouabt heavy snowfall to many of tilt same areas. ... famlllar faces and feel •n atmoepher• of oontlnulty? We Pf1de ourae1v11 on our fneodly, . well-trained 1teff who have .wet you conunua11y through the yeers. The only new faca •• addltloM we found we ha\19 needed to trieep up with our fNtt growing ectlvlty In the atore. lafft It nlct to haws that fHllng of trust In 01~ trttndl. • • • pwtleut«ly when It COfT99 to buying aa lalting a gift a a piece of fine Jweliy. 5ealOn9 grtetlnga frotn tll your frtendl: at Chat1M R. &arr ~ DoM• 8laCkmln Bill Pannell ·~~ck JNn Wlt"amaon TonySWIQOt ~Qer.et Armstrong -~Mdwlon H_.., Popiel • Rlctl ~vatne tild Of OOWW. Maty Barri '~ • \ DAILY PILOT !'1118SING REPORTS: Our Orange County public bua line, whlch ts operated mainly on vast amounts of federal cash, has turned up with a few ltems miss- in1. This has mlffed the bua bra11. What happened was that the Oranie County Transit District conducted what is characterbed as a random test audit. That means they sent people around to count the assets. What the auditors did was to select 80 items that were supposed to be owned by the bua line and then go out and try to find them. Alas, out of the 80 pieces of equipment. tbe auditors could on- ly "find or idenUfy" l.3 oflbem. CERTAIN WRONG Thinkers might leap to tbe conclusion that this means 67 items were miss· ing. If you, for example, came home after a night out on the town and discovered that 67 items had vanished from your domicile, you would prompUy scream for a cop. Auditors, however, are a more cautious breed. After checking out the bus line assets they noted that the report does not mean that the unfound items are miss· ing. They just couldn't be located or identified. Among those assets unJocated or unidentified, the report sug- gested. were two forkllft truck.fl. valued at more than $11,500 each ; one floor drlll press, priced at about $1,471 ; and a movie pro· jector, worth about $830. Now you can clearly un · derstand why the auditors wouldn't even suggest that these assets mighl have been ripped ofr. FOR ONE THING, forklift trucks have wheels and engines and are self-propelled and mobile. The lifts could have been out lifting something at the time the auditors came around. Or they could have been down at the corner for a lube job. Same thing with the movie pro- jector. Maybe it was loaned out lo the Board of Superviaors for showing or a training tum on fair c ampaign practices . Who knows? The floor drill press is a bit more difficult to explain away as being among the unlocated or un· identified. A floor drlll press is often found bolted to the machine shop floor. This one was ap· parenlly bolled lo nothing. Anyway, you should take the auditors' word for it that the un- reported Items are like some peo· ple feel about death. They are not gone. . . they 're just away. • . Slnce U.S. tax money pays for about 80 percent or the bus dis- trict's fixed assets, the federals require a complete physical in· venlory every two years. WRONG THINKERS again will suspect that some of the dis• trict's fixed a1111ets have become un-Cixed. Well, everybody misplaces tbints now and then. Last nltht my key case vanl!hed and I threw a fit, hinUng darkly that evil doers must have snatched it right therein the house. My wile found 1t on the noor under the night stand this mom· ing and jangled the keys under my nose. Maybe the county bus district ought lo hire her. TU9tday. Oecembef •. 1tn I Coal Miners Stage Strike CHARLESTON, W. Va . CAP) -HaU the naUon's coal producUoo ground to a halt today as the Unl\ed Mine Workers unlon atruck 1,800. mlnea to press demands for a waee increase, restored health and penalon benefits. and a right to strike over local 1rlevances. The last hope for averting the nationwide walkout died when con· tract talks between the UMW and the Bituminous Coal Operators AuociaUon were recessed Mon· day night in Washington. The contract whtch covers about 130,000 of the union's miners, expired at 12:01 a.m. to- day. Some union minera said they would picket non-union sites to try to stoptnlning there. Virgin.la and Kentucky have substantial non-union mining. The miners. who average t60 a Mal • day in wages, have asked for a aria "substantial wage increase" and also want the coal companies to refinance union health and pensions funds which have become depleted. THE UNION WANTS the new contract to restore a limited right-to-strike over local issues, while the operators want lt to specify penalties against miners who take part ln unauthorized strikes. Thousands of miners, particularly those in Ohio and West Virglnia, got an early jump on the strike by not showing up for work Monday. Virtually all mloes were closed in West Virginia, Ohio, Virginia. Indiana and Illinois. All union mines, employing about 22,000 miners, were closed in Kentucky. UMW MINES in southwestern Pennsylvania, which employ about 30,000 miners, all shut down. Eastern Pennsylvania min es are also UMW but come un- der another contract and were not expected to strike. Only two Tennessee mines are represented by the UMW, and they were expected to strike to- day as well. Union president Arnold Miller called the strike, although he said it "will bring hardships and human tragedy" to the miners. The union maintains no strike fund, and medical, retirement and death benefits for virtually all the union's 277,000 active and retired members stopped with the coal. Treat1Dent Endorsed W ASIIlNGTON (AP) -A drua tested on thousands of American soldiers in Vietnam for its effect.a on malaria la stlll the best treat· ment for the world's mUUons of lepers, despite evidence that lt causes cancer in laboratory animals. one expert says. The benefits of the drug-, dapsone. and related compounds to lepers outweigh any known cancer risk, say doctors who treat the disease. IN A REPORT Monday, the National Cancer Institute said dapsone bas been found to pro- duce cancer in male laboratory rats. Cancer experts said the test re- sults do not prove that dapsooe causes cancer in bumana, but do justify fo11owing up the medical histories or those who have taken the drug. Because dapsone proved eUec· live in preventing a severe strain of malaria resistant to standard treatment, the U.S. military used it as part of a medical experi- ment with tens of thowtands of soldiers in Soulh Vietnam. AN ARMY SPOKESMAN told The Auoclated Press the soldiers and Marines who were given the drug were not told it was used experimentally. Sadat Stands Firm Relatiom Broken .. With Five Nations CAIRO, Egypt <AP) -President Anwar Sadat has defied Arab pressure to abandon his peace overtures to Israel and broken rel.Ji· tions with the five natlons that met in Trlpoll to condemn him. Four of the five so-called hardliners -Syria, Libya, Algeria and South Yemen -agreed in Tripoli Monday to "freeze" relations with Egypt and form a "conrrontation front•' against Sadat. But the Egyptian president took a harder line than they did and broke rel•· lions. THE BaEAK ALSO extended to Iraq, which at~ended the Tripoli summit but refused to sian the final declaration because it wanted tou.eber action against El)'pt. Sadat's determination to pursue peace with Israel alone if tbe oUler Arab natiooS will not join him bu resulted in the most aerloua split ln the Arab world in yeara. But breaks in relattons between Arab countries are nothing new and usually are healed eventually. MEANWHILE IN LONDON Israeli Prime Minister Menabem a:~:i canceled hia appointment.a today because or what bis doctor c d a stomach ailment. "The reason for his illness ls probably food polaoning," saJd Dr. Basil Lewis, a heart apeclallat from Hadaaaah Hospital in Jerusalem wbo ii attending Belin durtnc bl.a stay in Britain. Belin arrived lut Friday and ia to fly home Wednesday aftemoon. •'There la DO connection wilh the cardiac troubles the prime miniat.er bu bad ln the put and bis present illness,'' the doctor said. He denled Israeli radio reports that the 64-year-old Begin bas ex- perienced chest pains. Begin suffered a heart attack last March and bas been hospitalized twice stnce then ":ith after-effects. ·Arctic Air. Cools South u Tornado$, Severe Tlumdenwnns Spawned • Te9~•m . ·.-~ ..... ..,._....~~~~....,.~~ Ht. La ~ .,, , Portraib of Tragedg Harvey Collins, 19, left, has been charged with vehicular homicide. leaving the scene of an accident. auto theft and armed rob· bery in which New York police say he stole a car at gunpoint, drove along the sidewalk on 42nd Street, killed one pedestrian and seriously injured 12 others Monday. Police aid one or the inJured victims struck down by the car estimated to be traveling at about 40 miles an hour. • Laetrile Batthf Looms ;i t ' • FD~ Vows. to Appeal Judge's Lifting of Ban j l WAS.l:DNGTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Admlntatratlon says it almost certainly wlll ap- peal a judge's order striking down federal restrictions on Judge Luther Bohanon said tbe ban was arbitrary and capricious and places a "needless bardablp and expense" on cancer patients. Laetrile. FDA SPOKESMAN Jack ''The FDA contends that Walden said the agency had not Laetrile should be 1llegal lo in· fully reviewed Bohanon'• de· terstate commerce and we would cision. "But if what we have fully expect to prevail on ap-rnal heard is true, we almost assured· ~po· ;.~~~8:1~ :io:::~Y·• ~",,ht~A ly will recommend an appeal; • • "Thia would.seem to be a J:Ul. EA&UE& MONDAY, a U.S. ing against the federal law which distrlc~ Judie in Oklahoma City requites that a drua be safe and issued a permanent injunction efrective before It can be market· forbid din& the aeency from en· ed in this country, .. Walden said. forcine its ban on interstate Bohanon said Laetrile has been movement of the controversial in use in this country long enoup substance, used by cancer pa-to be exempt from the FDA'• so- tieots. . . called "new drug" regulations. BUT THE FDA maintalna that lhe substance is not exe~t. 0 We contend that Laetrile waa not In- troduced and used tn Its present form and for lts present purpo1e prlor to 1962, which would have exempted it under the law," he ' said. Laetrile is a trademark for a substance derlved from tbe chemical. amygdalln. touad naturally Jn the pita Of aprtc.ota _ and peachea and In bitter almondl. ADVOCATES CIAUl1LHtdle is an eftecUve cancer treatmmt. - The FDA and moat of tile medical eslabll1bmen\ ln t,b1' country cont.end there Us no au.ch proof. , CllRISTMAS-GEMS . AND JEWEf,RY A11orted 14 karat gold handmade eolld neok chalna. many wtth matching braceleta. From t~24' Inch S240, 20 Inch S280. 28 Inch $300. 18 Inch ~150. Italian mad• high lu1tre gold eerpentlne neck and wrist chains In all lengths and wefghta. From top.19 Inch •75, 18 Inch t49, 16 Inch •35. 18 Inch 13<>, 18 inch '25. Gold nect< chain• In all dealgn1 IMeQlnabte, many with matching braceltta. From tos>-20 lnc:tt •2• 20 Inch ., ... , 15lnch1115, te inch 1115, 20 Inch 116' • n's Testimony • ed in Dismissal · AMENTO (AP) -A les· bo kY• sbe was nred as te'1 Wip dru1 abuse official UUcal reason• wants Gov nd Brown Jr. to testify at smlasal hearin1. • state Personnel Board ni officer, James Waller. say be wUl order Brown to test y lt he feels testimony by low offlclala requires it. " fter we hear thb evidence, perhapa the governor's tes ony may or may not be tm- por nt to us." Waller said at a pre earing eOA.ference Monday. E HEARINGS, scheduled to n Jan, 23, are on an appeal by r. Josette Jcfondanaro of her dis iasal as bead of the Depart· t of Health's Division of lance Abuse. Ciclals say Dr. Mondanaro fired because she used sex· ua expllcJt language in a letter wr ten to a friend on state sta- o ery. e letter critf~ized an arllcle l>l tlling the etfects of child •mogr..,hy a~d made unnat- tr int reCerence to As- S<nblyman John Vasconcellos, ~ D ·San Jose. calllnr him a .. liberal do-1ooder." BUT DR. MONDANARO, who acknowledces her le1blaolsm, and her aJ..torney, Ephraim Margolin, contend abe was fired to avoid political embarrassment for Brown, who is up for re· elecfion in 1978. "After her immediate superiors said this thing perhaps merits a reprimand, the aov- ernot steps in to do a personal fir· me." said Margolin, who con- tended Dr. Mondanaro was dls· crlminated against. "I do not think it happens in cases like Dr. Mortdanaro's very often. "THE GOVERNOR fired her on the last day of her probauon period because or pollllcal reasons, and by political reasons I mean re-election." Brown has acknowledaed ap- proving the firing but says Dr. Mondanaro was dismissed for failing to "follow the standards of society.'' "When people use the state and have a public trust. and com- ·~-· ....... FIRED OFFICIAL Dr. Joeette Mondanaro municale. they must do ao ac- cording to the standards of socie- ty, ·' he said at the Ume. ANTHONY DA VIGO, a deputy attorney aeneral, said Brown and bis secret.a.ry of health and welfare, Mario Obledo, bad no objection to testifyins iC Waller felt their testimony was needed, and would appear without being subpoenaed. But he contended that Margolin had not shown any grounds for Brown's appearance. f Reporter Right · Pushed stitClonal amendment protect· C"r ~TE ~ANGELES <AP >-A con-( ) jng be reporter's right to u.f /I. wittUld his sources should be enad\I so that judges will not ig-------·----- l nore tat right, says several at-torn&, and legislalors. C'y, have announced details or an-Je~Wall, an attorney who t1 ·pollution rules Sohio would reprflltted.four newsmen jailed have lo obey if 1t wants to build a becaw they refused lo rev •al a big lanker terminal at Long sourc• testified Monday that Beach. elevnt\r CaHfomia 's shield law, The conditions imposed by the which )Otects the confidentiali· slate and federal governments ty or a !porter's sources, Crom a stipulate Sohio would be required statute 1 constitutional amend-to reduce air pollution from other ment wod besigmficant. sources by more than the "The ,80ge would be shghl emissions Crom ils,proJect. rather an sweeping," Wall testificdat a bearing of the Senate 4d1clary Committee. .. But tht!ourt.s would be pre· vented rm declaring lhe shield Retlre9iellt 'For~ed' l aw unconitutional." '~b•cHtlolU SAN DIEGO (AP ) -The local chief of the Central Intelligence A~cncy savs he is bein~ forced to retire after calling publicly for an invesllgation of possible il- legal action by CIA officers. SAN F ~NCISCO <AP> Gov. Edm d G. Brown Jr. and 1 Douglas C e, bead of Lhe U.S. Donald S. Jordan, a 26-year CIA veteran and head of the San Diego office, said J,.hree agency officials arrived at his office Monday and banded him a retire- ment application. Scllool Fire Anoa? PALO ALTO (AP)-Tbealxth suspected arson at a Santa Clara County school in three weeks bas caused $500,000 and forced an elementary school to close in· definitely. The fire Monday al the Ba.rron. Park Elementary School here was the second in a Palo Alto school in eight days. Others oc- curred in schools lo Sunnyvale, Cupertino and Los Altos. AU~ Fadllty Clo•ed LOS ANGELES (AP) -A chain-link and barbed-wire enclosure serving as a temporary detention facility for illegal aliens has been shut down by U.S. immi- gration chief Leonel J . Castillo. Casli11o ordered the cage-like racllity cloeed Monday after it was brought to bis aitentlon by a U.S. congressman who described it as fit only ''lo house dog food.'' Publ~her Tries AgaiR. J Hustler's Flynt to 'Force' Another Arres~ E1 From AP Dllpatcltet HusU~ ma1uine publilher I.am Flynt. aaya. be plans to return to Clnclo.nati thJ1 week "to tell my magazine on the 1treeta and foree them to ar- rest me qain." Flynt ls appeal.in& bla conviction in Clncl.nnaU for panderint obscerut.y and conaplracy. He wu sentenced to 7 to 2$ years in p.riaon. His ma1atlne also bas been banned from aale ln Hamilton County under obecenity laws. Flynt told a Waablneton. D.C .. convention of the Speech Communication AuoclaUon that another Hamilton County trlal would be different because a Cleveland judge Ulla faU struck down Ohio's organized crime statute under which be wu convicted. Uttle Rock apartment. He wu 1ervina bis alxth:.;r, Senate term. Pryor, who bas Ule duty to appoint a auccossor tn McClell~ for Ut~ rti.mal.nder cllbi term, aald be met with Norma McClellan. 191 for more than hour. • Fashloq dealf:;,er BW Blaa says in a lawsuit , that Bluaport ited, one ol his interut.s, aut-. ,i • rered a posslble l06s of $1 mlllloo, , ,, ,. due to Ule spencii.nc habits ol lta ..... actine president. . Blaaa claim• that over the past several years Norman ZeUel' bas been usln1 corpora- tlon funds for such unauthorized '* personal expenses as political The Fontainebleau Hotel, a 750-room mixture contributions. clothing, a car, of Louil XlV elegance and Miami Beach ex-boat rental and airline tickets. trava1ance, was sold in bankruptcy court. The desiper tiled the suit in Bankruptcy judge Tb•mu Brlttcln sold the fad-Manhattan's stale Supreme ••• ing beach resort to---------.. Court. .,·,. Hotelerama, owned by ( ) • , ... Miami Beacb developer PEOPLE The Center for the Study of Democratic lnsUlu-' , Stepben llw and Roland lions elected the chancellor of the University ot 1 .. International, a $4 million· Denver as its president. lien-bolder. Attorneys The center's board of directors named Mautce connected with the sale estimated the sale price at B. Mltc:fieU to succeed the late Robert M. HGtckiaa,• • $28 mUllon. founder of the scholarly institution at Santa. Court attorney Larry Sellanh said that Barbara. Holelerama Corp. would continue to operate the A former president of Encyclopedia Brit.ln· Fontainebleau. nlca, Mitchell worked closely with Hutchins in set-1 ,. '* Tom Andenoa, who ran for president u the American Party candidate, says he's resl&Diqa as party chairman because "enough ls enough." "There's nothing stupen- ting up joint research projects between the en· cyclopedia firm and the center when it opened In 1959. ..... dous about tt," said Anderson, of F th f 2 H Id Pig~n Forae, Te";n. "I've just a er 0 e been in the job for five years and ' .. ., I ' it 'a In the best interest of the par- ty to have a new person." Jn Anderson polled about 167,000 votes when be wa.a the conservative group's presiden- tial candidate in 1976. He was on the ballot in 13atates. RapeAttac~ * Rep. Barbara Jordan, D-Tex. is rePOrtedlv concerned about. not bavin1 clout in congress and ls ••weighin1 the pros and cons" on I whether toaeek re-election. Miss Jordan, 42, the elo- q uent black congresswoman who caught national attention with her speech during the 1976 Democratic convention, is re· malning silent on her political future. Buther administrative aide, RafH Myers, aaJd that MiN Jordan is not certain whether she want.a to wall -perhaps many years -ror the congressiooal seniority system to move her into chairmanships which would allow bet more in- fluence. • The wile of the late Serr. ,Jotm L. Mc.Clellus dt!tlined an offer by Gov. Davlcl Pryor to appol..nt her to the remalnina 13 months of the senator's term. Pryor said. McClellan, 81, d.ied in bis sleep last week at his • I 11' SAN JOSE (AP) -A Vietnam veteran and •to divorced father of two, studyfni psychology at San l Jose State University, has been charged with rap. · t 1 lng a Catholic nun and a school teacher in separate t attacka near the campus last month. ,., Francisco Loera Jr., 27, was named l.n a nine· •'J. count complaint fHed Moaday in San Jose '• Municipal Court. He was arrested last week outside ·• - St. Patrick'• Convent alter be allegedly broke into •· the building where the nun reportedly was raped Nov.9. An undercover San Jose policeman, staking out the convent because of two previous break-int, shot Loera in the left leg when he tried to nee, the officer aald. Doctors aald the knee was so badly dama1ed by the bullet that Loera'a le1 may have to be am-: putated. • ·· The compJalnt charees Loera with breaking in· "• to the convent, raping the '1 year-old nun and fore-·•· ing her to perrorm a sex act. . "' It also accuses him ofraping a31-year-oldscbool , • teacher and forcing her to perform a sex act after '"' lhreatenlng·her with a bayonet. in an oll-campus '" parking garaee the night of Nov. 7. ..- Loera also is charged with attempted bur1lary for a Nov. 21 break·ln at the convent and with enter· , lng the coovtnt the night he wu shot. Environm al Protection Agen· ~----i-------=------------------------------:--------------~---------------------'----~ ... Trustee fees waived on aecoun~aope~ed now through December 31 , 19n. Eam ke advantage of· Money Saving etirement Plans Now with new added deduction for non-wage earning spouse E.lfective 1977. contributions to Individual Retirement Accounts riy be made up to $1,750 jointly ~1ween both wage earner and on-wage earning spouse (or 15% ,f annual earned income up lo t,750). The amount 1s d1v1ded qually rnto ~o accounts in the ame of each 1nd1v1dual. Even hough conlnbullons may be made as late as 45 days afler the end of your tax yejlr you must open your account by tfle end of the year to allow for income tax deductions. Start taking advantage of tax savlngs Immediately In addition to IRA. there is the Keogh account for the self-employed person. allOwing federal cont11but1ons of 15% up to $7,500 (10% up to $2,600 for state taxes). Another tax beneht rn add1hon to deduction of contnbullons. is tho deferment of taxes on interest earnings So the sooner you deposit your money the more interest you will earn, thus Increasing the amount you save on your income taxes. . Ask us now about special arrangements that must be made to meet deadline of December 31, · 1977 .%'% 1 and realize an annual yield of· 8.06 % by compoundfng daffy. IAA/KEOGH-ho~tnlmum bal«n<le-S-year term. Federal regula11ons permit w111'?drm1s trbm certificate account• befOC't maturity, but there is • eubtlarltlal reduotion lri interest earn1ng1. Ill~ 11111111 REPUBLIC FEDERAL: SAVINGS •lld loM llf"1f/IOfl I • . ,. BE I I E TRUMP · Mother, daughter, sisters, cousins ••• when you've met the whole family, you'll know what New Hero, and gauze. Is all about. Their favorite fabric, their only fabric •.. which is why they lnslst on native American cotton. Thicker, more substantial, with a way of adapting to the newest,Jull plousy shapes. And why you'll find simply oodles of rich, new colors: chocolate•. rust•. navy, natural, peach.•, shrimp, burgundy•, and chamois. Colors, shapes. textures: meant to mix and match, for seasons to come! BIOU69n, left, sizes P,$,M, $44 Tiered gypsy skirt wi1h drawstring waist, ·s,M.L. $40 Town and Travel conectlbtes • I\ 1h '1 <I i 1 ... " ~· ,. ' . .\6 . Prison Reflects Penny-pinching A woman prlaoner in Orange County Jail is seeking, through a cla!s action law suit, to end what she terms "dls- .crimination •' against female inmates. Sheriff Brad Gates denies there is sex bias ln the Jall .operation, beyond compliance with the law that requires male and female prisoners to be kept apart. It would cost )nillions of tax dollars to provide separate but equal facilities, Gates says. : There's some truth on both sides. '. First·tip'le male off enders convicted on minor charges in Orange County may be moved from the jail to the county .honor farm or to the Theo Lacy branch jail, a minimum liecurity facility. There they have the advantage of outdoor athletic fields and a chance to earn time off by going out on .toad crews. · • There are no facilities for outdoor exercise or recrea- tion at the women 's jail, other than a rooftop walkway to which the women are taken for an hour of fresh air once a :week. ' So, except for the few permitted work furloughs, 'Women prisoners literally spend their entire sentence )>ehind bars in what's known in the prison world as "hard time." ' This is not the fault of the Sheriff's Department. It's :the outcome of penny-pinching by past county govern- "rnents which has resulted in inadequate facilities for \vomen prisoners, regardless of the nature of their offense. While it's unlikely the county could afford new 1acilities, the board of supervisors could consi~er the possibility of leasing some sort of accommodation for minor female offenders to enable them to get out from 4>ehind bars once in a while. . Decision Overdue Problems between state officials and psychiatric .technicians at Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa were emphasized last week when technicians staged a 24-hour \iick-in. The technicians said they were expressing their )'rustration that the state had not recognized them as .equivalent to nurses in s upervising programs for the de· velopmentally disabled, in whose care technicians are ~specially trained. State health offic;ials claimed they had to obtain '.federal recognition of the equivalency to assure that 'lederal conditions for funding were met. 1 Technicians, about 70 percent of whom joined in the ,,trike, reportedly took care to assure that the patients had -adequate custodial sup~rvision during the sick-in. Apparently they made their point. This week state fHe alth Department officials decided they had misin· lterpretcd the federal regulations. Reversing their earller ~ecision that only registered nurses could serve as nursing ~oordinators in the state mental hospitals, they said the psychiatric technicians also quaUfy for the positions. The clarification was long overdue. If the Health Department had been paying a little more attention, a great deal of confus ion might have been avoided. New Tax Burden? Orange County taxpayers may be saddled with as much as $1.6 million more on their property tax bills to pro- vide unemployment compensation to county government employees. A new federal law taking effect in January will also re· quire taxpayers to pick up the tab for city and state gov- ernment workers who lose their jobs -unless a lawsuit filed by county and city groups across the nation trying to halt the law is successful. The federal government will pay the cost of the new program for the first few months, but within a year local government will be expected to shoulder the entire bill. On the one hand, government employees probably should be entitled to the s ame unemployment compensa· lion afforded workers in private industry. On the other hand, however. property taxpayers already are burdened enough without being socked for another government-imposed program. State legislators have yet to enact a measure to set up the program in California but may do so soon to avoid federal penalities. ._ Among the penalties could be cancellation of tax credits given private firms for a portion of their unemploy- ment payments and a cutoff in federal dollars for state employment development departments. If federal authorities are inclined to expand work benefits for local government employees perhaps they ought to help finance such programs. Local government's r ecourse for financing such programs unfortunately is the already over-burdened property tax. .. . .. Opinions expressed In the space •bo~ are those of the Daily Piiot. ·Other views expressed on thl& page a)'e those of their authors and ·artists. Reader comment la Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. . Box 1560, Costa M'1a, CA 92628. Phone (71.,.) 642:"4321 . Boyd l Salutes BTL.11. BOYD Ann asked' wtw the prea- 1 d t n tl al cannon salut• cuatomarily cal.la tot' 21 1b0tl. ln1tead ~. ll)', 10 1hota or 100 shot.a. ~t. ioea on aboUt that. But some hiltortana oon. tend the 21•1\Ul aalut. WU de-; viaed to. commemont. tilt year 1V7$ With tbe aalutea be- IDI fired thl• way: one-aeven- leVtn·•ix. A restaurant cMf In Japan hu to be µc~ by the 1ov· emment ~ore ht ptJS P«· pare that dellcac1 known u the fufU fllll.' lf be doesn't know bOW to fl~ tJie Cl11h, be caa mate you ~' alck. • 'nere'1 po1lon 1D that filb'1 lkftt. ZoOmm .rho Oqtit to know contend l\ '• lmpos1lble to lW a ~ an a rope, iaJdloiaO . .., 1-it can be ~tliMall • •• It WU a...a....._.,_UldofW.C. "'1di: ·~ -• prOfouftd NIJMt 6ir Gld"'• "pectalb' ..... •11&~ bottled' •••• The- KID of that Ch1Dele 1t1hun1 dbl known u the Ch ..... Pel ii • pleateia like an acecmtklO. , • Tbtre are tbOle hlatonana wbo lnlllt Lbat Pnlldent ~ dNW Jacaon MYtt did com• to ~. notion that the eartb II round and not flit •.. Averac• tem· ~\UN Of tbe fted S.a 11 • de1r1a F., Mvtn d11ren 1urmar tbaa tll1 tem- per....._ •t ntet. batter ..... Robert N. Wffd/Publlsher ftVll /Edltor TUiUday, oec.mber I , 1t77 .. I e.r~,.. Krtlblch/!dltorlal P RoWLlnd Evans/Robert Novak Carter Can Tack with the Wind WASHINGTON -The safety route ta.ken by Jimmy Carter to rescue bia presidency became clear Oct. 20 when be refused the advice ot vlalUng liberal Democratic Senators on bow to save bis energy blll. The way to pau the bill, these kindly Senators advised Prest· de nt Carter, was to stop all further deal· tnsa with the i m possl ble Sen. Russell B. Long or Louisiana. Sen. Howard Metze nbaum of Ohio deplored re· ported presidential agreements with Long on energy. Instead, the liberals said they should be the President's partner: stick with us who believe in your program instead of negotiating with the enemy even if he is chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. Mr. Carter listened politely, denied any agreements with Long and suggested Intimate a!· ter-dlnner meetings w.tth the liberal Senators. Those meetings never have taken plac~. but the President has conferred more than ever with Long -and reached agreements. Indeed, he brought in trade negotiator Robert Strauss as a master maneuverer lo help deal wlth Long. THE R~ULT: the President has quietly faded from the energy battlefield and can expect passage or a bill that, if scarcely monumental, can be labelled a moderate success. Similar withdrawals rrom hard positions have characterized the President's response to his crisis of competence that peaked in early October when a "one-term President" bec ame the catchphrase of Washington. Besides avoiding confrontation with Russell Long, the President has pulled back from tax reform and his round-the·world trip and markedly softened his rhetoric. Earl Waters Tha\ dlaptay1 the neidblllt.)' of J 'mmy Carter, Whereu Lyndon Johnaon and lUchard Nixon pushed doggedly throueh th• quagmires ot Vietnam and Watergate to inevitable dealruc· t~on, Mr. Carter C4\n tack wtlb the wJnda. Conuquently, even thoueb the Carter presidency has hardly begun to solve internal problems or purpose and or· ganization, the one-term label (now spread lo the nation's grauroots) is grossly pre- mature. THE P8ESJDENT is an avid reader of polls, as were LBJ and Nixon. But unlike them, he acts on their results. So, at the time or his mounting problems In early October, pollster Pat Caddell was in the Oval Office for long sessions. Soon afterward, Mr. Carter began scallng down pro- grams and broadenlrur contacts. . It was thon tl\at Strauu, at tho threshold ot the Carter lnn•r clr· cle for months, was led Jnalde. Even Carter alde1 who have minimized this relationshlR. were impressed when on Sunday eve- nlne, Nov. 6, the PNsfdent dined at the Strauss apartment in the Watergate. Insider Slra\las, more and more a Gray Eminence for Jimmy Carter. had Joined t.be President's youthful outsiders. While Strauss was first put in charge of a dubious scheme to sell the energy plan to the nation, be baa predlct,ably evolved into a backroom ne10Llalor with Congress. That ls accotn panied by softened presidential rhetoric in baJtlng big OU. The denunc'-- tion of bis Oct. J3 ("biggest rlpott in history") press conference was transformed to the benisn generalitles in bis Oct. 21 press conference. CONDtJcr followed rbet ric. The President Is working cl ely not only with Sen. Long but th the oil fnduatry's Washington bylsts in drafting an enerc c promise. Next came postponement d draistlc pruning or the mad p w<?rld tour und, moro importa t. the decl11lon to hold b1&ck tax • form. Still infatuated wlth campaign rhetoric, the Presi was the last holdout on tax form. But ho too now is sway by arguments on the necessi for quick tax reduttion whi would be impeded by major t reform. Such decisions do not go to t inner causes of the Carter eris of competence. ms White Ho slatr remains weak and di~ orsanlzed, In need of a chier stafr. One result was the drea fully organized coast-to-coa trip in October, just when he di not need such ludicrous ex pos ure, and what one ad ministration official called "th ridiculous trip" around th world. MORE TELUNG is the lack theme In his adminlstrat1 reflected in public confusion a poor internal morale. Cart men wistfully note that for aides of John 1''. Kennedy years later still wear PT· tiecltlsps and talk about "our · mini stration." S h camaraderie Is sadly abse the Carter adminlstralio partly the lack or personal a: tionships with the Presi partly the lack of any co goal. Here is the source of f difficulUes. This failure may stem m President Carter's flexi ity. but the same flexibility is sav· ing virtue. Disorganized a rud- derless though his adm stra· tion may be, he will no llow disastrous policies to r . He has emerged from hi com- petence crisis as a Presi l who can abandon lax reCor soften oil·balting rhetoric and ainly deal with Russell Long. Retirements May·DampenGOP Bo s Republican hopes or recouping at least part of the power they en· joyed when they dominated both houses of the Legislature through most of the first half of this cen· tury and some of the years since, are being dampened. This is due in part to the pla~ of some mem· ben to seek other offices and of others to retire. As It stands the 1\epublicans hold only 23 of the 80 seats in the A111embly and 14 of the 40 in the Senate. P arty leaders have been busily laying plans to expand their numbers lo both houses ror many months, caretullt sighting in on Democratic members they believe to be vulnerable in next year's elections as well as those districts wblch might be vacated by Democrats seeking other of- fice• or retiring. While they con~ede their 'Art Hoppe· chancea of gaining enough addJ. tional seats In the Auembly t.o win baclt control are virtually nil. they did have high hope& in the Senate. That is ~ause only three or the 20 Senators who must stand for re·electlon next year are Republicans. If they could bold those and captur~ seven more they would have a inaJority. And control, of the Seaat.e would put them in a position of power in state government artalrs. BUT THE announcement by Senator Peter Behl' of Marin County that be would not run· again was qulcJdy followed by a similar discl6sure by Senator John Stull of Sa-. Dleso and rumors that stilt the third Republican incumbent up /or re- election, Senator Dennis Carpenter of Orange County, miiht also retire. This would leave the Republicans with no in- cumbent Senst.on seekine re- election and compel them to COD· centrate on findin1 electable replacements ju.at to bold the strength they now have. In the cue of Carpenter and Stull that may not be too difficult for both come from dlstrtcts wbich favor the Republicans. Behr's district ls not that solid for the GOP which is probably one of the reasons he baa opted out although his health obviously has inlluenced the decision. EVEN SO, their departure would be a substantial loss for the Republicans. Stull, who has served-the longest with a total ot 11 years ln both houses, bu been a source ~ strength, making hia pretence felt through enactment of n1Jroeroua meaaure9', for the betterment o! e~ment. Most impressive has been bJI fearless and successful efforts to bring about better management prac· tices by the University of California despite the institu· tion's fierce opposition. Carpenter, too, has won the respect of bia colleagues as evidenced by his selection as chairman Of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee. Behr, bas been moreol a maverick, author- lne environmental legislation considered by most Rep\Jbllcans, been effective. THE SJ11JATION the As- sembly side is not y oo clear but at least four umbent Republicans are t ng with forsaking their sea r higher office. Thia Includes n Maddy of Fresno who ls g for gov· emor, Dixon Arnett an Mateo running for Controll and Mike Antonich of Los Ang s running for lieutenant go or. With Stull's announc ent Bill Craven ol San Dies clared bis candidacy to repla Probably the bi Assembly Republi announcement by Lanterman of Pu na that be will step down. A mber since 1951, Lanterman i he dean of the Republicans nd a rec· ognlzed authority state ftscal affairs. Throufh ears he has also been a slnau) influence in health and wella matters as weU u other m.i rograms. The Milks~e Theory: Dreams That Bae • :tre The saddest news ln the paper last week waa t.hat the infa!J\QU.$ tbree·tnartlni expebse account lunch ts but a mete figment of President Carter's 1taU.SUcal tm- a1lnatJon. The National Restaurant As- aoclaUon released a survey of ct· pense account luncheon or-ders which 1b0Wed coffee and tea 14 'times more popular than cocktails and non.rat cot· tace cheese ouhelllnc Mcarsots. • What ll ao 1ad ebout all t.hll ls ttiat St fuJly connrma ..-1 lona·held MUkahakeTbeor)'ofJ,tfe. Tbl1 lUtl•kM~ theorem Of maJor frilportancet stems from my own bitter ~rlence 'with mUltahaket. I love milkshakes. FOr th• nnt 25 )'.fan of my ure I dreamed ol bilnt ritb enou1h to afford all the mllkillakta I wanted. Atloo1lutthatma,ctcalda:rar· rived, 1 held d~n • 1teady ~ob U4 wu able to buy OCM -•~en two-milkihUn a day. Heavef\! ln 1lx monthi I Pined~ poundil. ADctfotthepatts 79us ttt my Ufe 1111 .. ......_. of bdial we_ enough to o.ff4Pfd all ~he mllkshakeshvanted. f LIKE AU. 1reat ontolostes. The Mllb"'-ke Theoey of Lif• em· braces more than mllk•haltea. A classic uample ot its worldn(a can be found In the bloaraptut of Milton Haberdub. Llke •ll children, Mlltorl yearned for. the day wheo he would befreeofparental aulhorl· ty, able to go wbero ho wanlod to io•nddowhathew•ntedtodo,in- cludins readini comic books at the table. Aa a teenaser bis dream~ of course, were of romance, adven· lure and 1ueceaa -to tall In &ave with a ~auUful woman, to scale the Matterhorn, to be eD\'ied by allforhlaweaUh At 21 be achlev..S mott ot Illa f onde1t dream• by movlna lhto his own Qartment and tumbllna head over hetf• tor lo ilY Milli• cent Momper. Oh, wbata 1lottoU1 ·~ months Of miOdCIPI, 9nd mad. er zy pan1~1 Then \Jiey -. . m1ttled. five days! That was hefore Milli- cent brought the squaw ling infant home. Milton began working late at the otnce, his eye upon the second vice presidency. At last bis fond- e8t dreams were rtallzed with a secretary, a coat rack and an ex- pense account of his own. For eight months be thrived on all the three·martlnl lunches he could drink. His blood prmure paturally wes1t. up 84 points and hls doctor put him on the old salt· free. cottage-cheeu wacon with the restott:be boys. He never made the M atterhom, but he and Millicent dld enjoy ono thrllllnf trlp to France. They wo again, but Mllto . portance grew, fou ficult to get away Besides, he now fo in&. When he was 47. him. He dldn 't ca could afford to c dream into reality The Stork Club w young creature on all the Olher eel murmur, "Look dogl" He did and how stares I Ho dld. overheard two din hlm,notasalucky u "a horny old med.lately marrt d1e·a1ed woman Wok. e south of have gone s bis im· it too dif· m his job. travel Ur· Ullcenl left For now he ert. one last to walk into a beatultul arm so that ant. would that lucky .. .. NATIONA DMl Y PILOT .,. f Billy Graham's Group Garnered 828.7 Sl)JT'OR'S NOTE: • ~ . no eoo,.gclbt h better kftoton '""'"~ tlw notba °""' ,,.~ Oae/ world IMft tlN Rev. BiUSt Grlham, /rieftd of ~.and mfMter to mUllonl. Hert, In U.. wcond of a wrice, u. a look. cd dte Grabam~. i By n11ru•1Ea MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -It 11 : 15 a.m.. inside a two.block, cJuater ot brick bulldlqa on the e.Sce of downtown. Fifteen women pray at their desks. From a folder with a picture of praying bands on the cover, they are given letters -letters from a family whose mother la lD sur- gery. from a couple bavlnc marital problema. FO& THE NEXT quarter of an hour, the women pray: for the mother, for the couple, and perhaps, for their employer. Bil- ly Graham. Their devotions over, the women begin to open envelopes. Thousands of them arrive each day. Many addressed ahnply: Billy Graham, Minneapolis. A third of the letters ask for help or a prayer. N~arly au contain money. A recent batch or 30 letters , shown lo a visitor contained $149 -about $5 apiece. The average donation is close to $10. LAST YEAR, THE non-profit, tax-exempt Billy Graham Evangelistic Association re- ceived $26.9 million in gifts. Total income of $28.7 million also in- cluded $1.4 million from estates and $359,000 in interest and other income. But it was largely the flood of small donations that paid to spread Graham's -he would say Cbrlat 's -message to convince thousands to become Christians, and once in the fold, to remain there. Broadcasting is a key element in the Graham ministry. The association spent $27.~ million in 1976. or this, $8.8 million, or 32 percent, went for production and time on radio and TV. The "Hour of Decision" weekly 30-rninute radio show is heard on 900 stations and three or four televised crusades are aired on 310 stations each year. THE ASSOCIATION WAS set up because Graham decided lo take his ministry on the air, a $25,000 venture for 13 weeks oa the ABC radio network in No- vemberl.950. · "We didn't know what lo ex- pect," said George Wilson, &s· sociation executive vice presi· dent who has managed the non-profit corporation from the beginning. Wilson drew up papers for a corporation: ''To transmit the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ by radio and television .•. by tracts, books and other publlca· tions . . . by any and all other. means." He hired .a secretaij, rented a small office and waited for the mailman. MORE THAN 4,000 letters ar· rived their first month. The dona· tions in the letters kept Graham on the air, and underwrote the ''means" to spread the Gospel. In the next 27 years the cor- poration expanded into ~elevision. books, maaazines and Tru~ers Pay SACRAMENTO CAP) -Truck drivers who break the speed limit are· getting cau1bt more often, the Calflornla Highway Patrol "y1. CHP Commlslioner Glen Craig said truckers re- ceived 4,964 citations for breaking the SS-mile-per- hour speed limit in Oc- tober. .J 11 ........... .,. ........... AC!MINISTRATOR -George Wilson, who runs Billy Graham's Minneapolis operation, shows pride in his efficiencies, machines, computer. films. It employs 500 people around the world, includlni 375 in Minneapolis. According to a balance sheet filed with the Mlnnesota Securities Division. th~ associa- tion last year spent $10.• Jllillloo, or 38 percent of lta buqet, on • 'eYangelism ministries." Of that $S.6 million went for mall handl· · ing, literature and crusades by ' eight associated evangellats. Graham's 11 crusades a year are self-supporting. SOME $1.5 MILLION of the "mlDi.stries'" budget went to the World Evangelism and Christian · Education Fund, basically a building fund establiahed seven years ago. Wrtb cash assets of $23 million. this fund bas already tr..an1ferred $1 ·mullott to Grabam'!J alma mater. Wheaton College, Wheaton, Ill., tor a Graham Cent.er foLCommunlca- tions. Another $& million ls earmarked for the graduate school to teach evangellats how to use modem mass media. The fund also owm 1,000 acres of land near Asheville, N.C. which might be used for a laymen's retreat center. OF THE REST OF the "ministries"' budget, $1M2,000 went to Wheaton College, SZ09.000 to other religious or· ganbationa and almost $21,000 to citf)er atliliates. The fBSoclaUon • ., balance abeet'al*>abo'NS: $2.5 mllllOb for forel'8 crusades and world em'ergenclet, $2.8 million for Declaiob magazine, $1.4 million . for admhliat_ratlon •nd $1.S miWonfotpcstqe. $1.5 m.ill1on for postaae. The a11oclatlon mails 100 million to 125 million pieces ol mall a ,ur, lnclucUD1 25 mUJ.ioQ appeal• for funds. Decialon ma1aalne la malled to fow- mllllon people each mootb. 08AB~M'8 SALARY OF S.W,500 ts listed in a $248,000 It.em for officer and dlrector salaries. A board ot as bualnesam•. financiers, clercymen and awyen l\lldea the uaoctation. An executive committee, which meets every six weeks, keeps tabs on tbe budget. It la chaked by Allan Emery Jr., a d.lrectorof ServiceMaster Industries, ~ton. Its trusurer ts Robert Van Kampen who la a bankfnC cooaultant ln Santa Barbara. Aasodata say Graham, who carries the UUe of president. keeps ln touch with the operaticln in Minneapolis. But Graham himself aaid at a news con- ference that the board "bandies the s~ar affalra and I give myself to preaching and wrltiq. I don't come to Minneapolil often, lt'asoefflclently nm." WILSON, THE llAN who runs the operation, ii a 63-year-<>ld former printer and Baptlat preacher who also once owned a bookstore selling Christian works. . As he guides a visitor through the association headquarters, Wilaon abows pride in bia effi. ciencies, in patented mail-room macbinea that keep U.S. Postal Service Mmitructs bua_y at load- ina doc.ks, or ln a computer that maintaiof a malHng lilt of aeven mllllon names and a record of their dorUdiODI and pu.rcbaaes. A squad ol boulewivea ii kept busy typinc 50,000 addreu changes a month. About 4,000 names must be deleted each month alter donondle. Four or five times each year, five million people on the ••ac- tive" mailing lilt receive a plea for money. signed by Graham. "WB'RE A SPl&fTED or·· santzation trying to rea~b·people· with all the modem means of communication," said Wilson. ''The fact that it takes money to do Ula really a necessary item. Tbe purpoee la to reach as many people in as short of time as A UTTOM PACTORY UP- USB(TATIVE WILL II THiii TO DIMOMSTUTI AND ... swa ALL YOU. QUESTIOMSU • .... 5"CW. DISCOUNTS Wn.L II OFFa.8 TO ML PAITICIPAMTS IN 1HIS CONSUMER SEMIMiU. . IASIEI YASTI Al&. THE YUMMY DfSHES AND SHHOW1HIY AREPUPAUD. possible." .------------~--~-......;,;.;.;....;.;.......;.;....;..;...;..;;;;;.;:..;;,;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;:.;.;;;;;;,.__...:.,....._...;;..;. __ ~..;....;.;:.. Some make contact with Grabam in person. At a r«ent _. CinclnnaU crwsad~. wbicb drew ~6:r-:~u~:Vfo:!~··:1iO:! '\ ro Graham Invited them to accept \ • Cbrtat, to be born &lain. .. "" " Each ol the 7,075 waa met by a tJ 1> ,._ • counselor, wbo gave the "in-~"():~-. ~ quirer" tbe Book ol John and a • ·r. · bible quiz. The coumelor con-ffl":..~ ~ tacted the inquirer in a day, ~('\ ~~~ again in three Uyll. and referred ~ ~,~, • ~ + him to a church near b1s home. • , +~+ 9 ,,.__,,...,uo Tbe inquirer also got a year's \ \+'0'.1.'~ .. "...ool'l~"r-.· subecrtptiootoDemlon. ~ ~..,.~ THE CO•PLETED BIBLE quiz, 01ailed to Minneapolia, went to the • ...,lrt~al counael· ing •' department. wbicb weekly bandies 16,000 letters requiring anawen to a~Ulc questions. Large lcxJie..leaf blnden at 10 deaks CCIDtain h~ Of pre. pated anawers cotnpatlble wtth Graham's vtewa. From these form paragrapbs1 a personal let- ter ii dictated a.no typed. Nut: Oral Roberie ~· DAii, Y PIL.OT ORANGE COUNTY J POLITICS J 0~1TUAf\tES • Wilson, C1lrh;. ~ranston m· ~u11nty _m_ By O. C. H1JSTINGS ... Dililt'I .......... hoet bar wW be available. JleHrva· lions 1bould be made~ GOP Central Coo:lmlttM olt\cfl, 54T-IOOS. San Dteeo Mayor Pete wii.oo. a Jtepublican 1ubemat.Orlal hopeful, Wil!l be ln Oranae Coun~1 aealn Wed· n~day. '*** 8BFO&E HJ8 luncheon speech Wednuday to the Oranle County DemocraUc Rostrum, U .. Senator Alan CrU>lton will have breakfast wlth some of the cowsty'a bu.sin ... leaders at the Bl1 Canyon Country Club in Newport Beach. Tbla time, WU.On, who hu t>e.n kina • concert.eel elfort over the at several month• to woo GOP rs in tbe county, wW be iUICUll· I rent control and boualn1 at a eeU.O. cl the Southern Callfomla In· \on. After funcb, California 's Democratic senator will meet with leaden of the Oranee County Jewish community la Tustin. He will wind up biJ day ln the county by meellne with leaders of Santa Ana 'a Chicano com- m unity. The meeUne Is scheduled for 7 p.m . l Auheim 's Hyatt Ho\&le. *** ORANGE COUNTY Republican adera plan a reception Wednesday t the Santa Ana County Club fot Mike urb, the recordlnc lnduatry ex· cutlve who ls aeekln1 the GOP omlnaUon for lieutenant governor. ••• PEG TUCKER of Laguna HUls will Sponsors of the 6 :30-8:30 p.m . atherlng Include Congressman obert Badham, state Sen. Dennis arpenter, Marcia Mae Bents and Ulard Voit. be installed as the new president of the Council of Republican Women when that iroup meets Thursday lo Fullerton. Other new council officers include Dorothy Crabb of Irvine, vice presl· dent; Blanche Daniell of Irvine, re· There is no admission charce. A no- ll r. • ) Driver Gets 30 Days • ~A man who, police said, waa drunk ttBh.lnd the wheel when his car struck *1d killed another motorist and a t4w truck opera tor in the Seal Beach .. ea haa been sentenced to JO days ln i anee County Jail and placed on five ars probation. Superior Court Judae Pbillp E. ~hwab sentenced Michael WaJker tromme, '37, or Cerritos, after the de· ndant pleaded no contest to anslaugbter charses. Gromme wu arrested near the in· t.enectlon of tbe San Diego and San Gabriel freeways by officers who said bis car struck tow truck operator Ken- neth Sage and the man he was help· lng, Edmund Lopea Jr. Both men died at the scene. Officers said Sage was attempting to extricate Lopez's car from thick shrubbery when Gromme reportedly lost control of bi.A vehicle and plowed into them. ~ ~·~J!ll~~-~~..-.:y,,,~~~~~ For the Record, : Marriage • • ~" ~ITE·WHITE -w ... N•r"Wr. c7 .\d J a net II••, 21, belh al 7.:'"''"' ... ~OSALL·F-OM -flay-O •• u . $flr;;·~:::N ~ :::· :: ~Im, -.. \NI Arll .... SS, H-,. i .,Be<KJ> UMI0.1$ ... Cl(SOH -ll16Uell -· 16, -lendr• £.,Mt bolll of ""''""a..11, ~llrS.HILL -111<-.S Raloi(. JO, J enell• l!Nrte, '4. lllOth .,· O..te lEll-4..AMPMAH -Me,.,.111 111; , lld K8-DenlM, 20, both of NowpOI t S.a<:ll. fERRY·8ELL £rlk•M. lt, and Jaro M•rl4. U. bolh of H""llnQlon 8H<h w1tAY ·Lew1s -Mac 0011a 1d Wll)IMI, fl, -••rblra Awtll .... bolllol Mt-1 ~II. LANOCE·OA01E -Arilholly Olrlt, II, 811d ~,_I L.J'M, "· both Oii ti,,.,,.,,.,. Vl!Z·C.\llOAMOW -Al'IO I I ro, )), -Sl9r let, >4, 111111 4lf HUfttl119ton llM<h "'OllEHEAD·LONGO -Jtreld Lelloy, ». -Contlanet. %2, Dolll of Fa..nteln Vallev Nlf TPAS·WISfMAH -Gllu 11 .. 1or, u. -Jac-11,,. !Nrl1, 10, )011\ol Founl11nV111..,. DAVIS.81100Ell1CI( -Olrlat~r Fr~ftell, 21. -LlncMI larralN, li, t>ofhof oa ... Point PQINTl'IELD·MEANS -Gltnft tt\omu, It. El Toro, and $,,.rry lfM,IO,ANNlm ~LISON·.\l.LISON Pa.ii I!., 47,r• rn rrlHI lltQIN M ' 46, Doth Of Gotle ""· I Nowmbtr1' PACHECO.KIMZEY -JOH £., 11, Peath Notice• · McCORMICK MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 788·0933 San Juan Capistrano 495·1776 1 IAL TJ.IH•HOM fUMHAL HOMI Corona del Mar 67~&> , Costa Mesa 848·2424 I I HiLllOADWAY WOITUAIY 110 Broedwey Costa Mesa 842·9150 I SMfTff TUTHIU LAMI jCOSTA MH4 CH.,. 427 E. 17th St. fost a Mesa • 6<46-4888 Santa Ana Chapel 618 N. Broadway ~ante Ana • 647-4\31 I "llCI llOTNIH ~S'MOIT\IAlT I 627 Mlln St. 1 1 Huntington Beach ~&39 I ' .......... "' I COlOHIA&. PU"91W. HOMI I 710t Boin Ave. I W .. lmlnater I 893-3525 I I 'ACfflfC YllW t MIN0114L PAll I Cemetery MortuttY \. Chapel 1"500 PacWc vi.-0n .. I NtWOOft. C.llfornla ~··2700 .,,_ CIW'l'I AM, If, flat/I of CO.le "'4w KLAU8ER·Blll Jay Wllllam, n, -Mery OWltllN, JO, Doth Of CotlA ,,.. .. LANOAU·LINE -Keith All.,,. 24, -Mefiltlle 0.-. 24. Doth Of Soutll l ........ Wflll4M$-"'°5Kf0$ -Girard K., 41. Cypreu, ll>d OonN Krl,llN, 11. ~wpOrl&M<I\. EIOE·SMl'04 -J-A., U, eOd Lavonne ll., ii. bo(h Of Huntlnvl<wl ... ch SIMON·LAllKIN -Jolln Andrew, 40. •"d Lynda O.altfgl\, n, DOth of INIM. TAP'T·EATOH -k-MlchHI, 20, -April S.., •,!Mith of F-Uoln Velley. PINO.MANNINO-Jolwl "-'-ti, 24, -8•rtowa AHi, JI, llotll Ill HUflt. lf\VIOll 8MCl'I. WESTENBERGER·&RIGHT - Steohtn Petrl<.k, 2S. •nd Johnnie .. !Inda, M. bolhof Hunt! .... a.a<ll. #OUHOLOEll-HEEDHAM -Br._, "°"''· n, ANl>elm. •nd ,._,a a11ui.t11. n . Ccl94a IMM. THOMAS.PRATTE -Gery t..ori, 21, lf\d ~rOll LOUIN, 1', bo(h of H""I· ,,....., 8N<ll GONTE·8UTLEll -Pflltlp J • '1, Wutmlnllw, -U...S. i..., JD, Tor. raMe. HAllA·WILKIHS -Gery R., lO, Ind Lot A~. and 8rende LH, JO, Newporl .. Kll. ' ...._..._D IUZZO·KO$LIN -s.mwt, .,,, encl Sopllla, 7',bOthof~Hllll • 8A8C0Ct(.CAMPOY -SltOft Mlcl\ael, U, -lf\flon .. ~ • ..,.. E,11\er, >O. W.St Cov1,.. WOLf E HERNAEZ -Carl Warner. SJ. S•n Clemontt, a11d E11-.111 AU<r~.s... Sell Fr•rKIKo. CAUOLE·WHIEl!Ll!ll -Gary TMMU, JO, ...0-'-l..M, 30, .. IJ\ Ill CfflalMN • PAllKMAH-OWOf'P -ll099r K., 21, HWMlnoton a.eat, -H_, ll., :M, a.111oa. HUGHl!S.PETElllSOH -w111i. a .. v . ,..,,,,,~. Mo., -,,_ .. ~Ml, 20, HYWlngton INCll. .......,...,. 8 UTTl!RPll!LO·IARllf:TTE - O.vld lloY, lD, and Row l., l3,bolhof HunC11191an BNc:ll. Deathif .Elsewhere ~~:Joa,..,•·..,.,, ot Callll•r-WASHINGTON (AP ) Mc CAvG+4£Y·s.4EHIEE -"au' a . -David K.E. Bruce, 79. ~~·11,.~:,~:.~'.!:!~".v. a nd Erin the only American to 111wcoN·110JAS -11,.,.,, "· a11c1 serve as ambassador in ~~·,·~~Aurore,Q.bolhofC.pla1r-Western Euro~·s three ...........,.. mo s t prestigious $0UTHUIN·TEBBETTS -Wiiiiam diplomatic posts -Jovpt,, Jr., Jl, TUllln, -CMof S.., 24, ,_1 .. nva11..,. Great Britain, France 'vuTSON·L~'Mt._y, 11, and West Germany - _, La-ia M., 10. 1oo111 of South d i e d M o n d a y • H e LaouM became the bead of the HUSSAIH-OlllLLO -Alcllotr All. ti, u .s. liaison offic~ ln -z. China in 1973 and -again Deatla Notice• retired in 1976 after serv· ing as ambassador to NATO. DULUTH, Minn. (AP) -Dr. ADdenoa HUcH1t1, SS, who did much of basic J:etearcb into the fun· damental functions of the nose, sinuses and lunes. died Monday. cordins secretary; Beverly Ba.rnee of Newport Beacb, correapondlne secretary, and Gerry Stewart of Newvc>rt Beach, treasurer. *** smaLEY WALTON Of HunUniton Beach, an aide to Asumblymu Chet Wary, D-Oarden Grove, ls the new prealdeot of the Democratic: Women ol Oraqe County. Billie Groskl of San Juan Capistrano is the group's first vice president. · Women who are recllltered Democrata are invited to Join the or· ganlzaUoo. Call 898·3831, or 528-0024 Cor information. *** THE SADDLJ;BACK Republican Assembly (El Toro, LalUDa Hilla, Minion Viejo) plans its annual Christmas party Friday nlaht at the home of Henry W. Ballard, 24265 Cataluna Circle, Mlsslon VleJo. ••• TUE ORANG.£ COUNTY Republican Central Committee plans a Christmas party~. 13 at county GOP headquarters, 717 S. Main St., Suite 200, Oranlt. Altenuate memben of the central committee. led by Vera Mannina of La1wsa Hilll, will be boata for the 7 .. p.m. openbouae. Current Republican officeholden and ca.odidatea are expected to at- tend. The eve.11t ;a open to all interest- ed i>eraona. • •• . A ... PER. PERSON fundralnr la planned Dec. W ln HuoUnst.on Beach Cor Chuck Glblon, a candidate for the Republican nomination in the 78rd AJ.. aem bly Dtltricl. The dinner (invitation only) will be held at the home of Mr. and Mn. Arvi1 Batchelor. ••• THE BALBOA BA y Republican Women, Federated, will tour Newport Harbor aboard the Pavilion Queen Dec. 20, starting ate:30p.m. For a $15 donation, int.rested Republicans can see the annual Gbt\stmas boat parade, eat dinner and have a chance to meet some GOP le1lalatoq and candidates. Call Beverly Paul, 759.1939, or Marianne Thompson, 675·2111, for reservations. For fast rellef from that stuffy feeling ... call us first take a Fir~t Ndtlon.il Home ,.~ltlrlllltiii .... -tl lmprovmicnt Loan. So don·t fight the ~e .iny longer Visit 1h.i branch manager or loan olltcer at 1h11 F11~1 NMlonal brMch ne.ir e~t yoU. We'll g1H you and go dlrec1ly to your contractor Consider tht pos~tblfllle\ A new family room Cen!Jal air conditioning. A s~mmlng pool. A bulll·ln kitchen. Al most any home 1m -=i~.11'11;.~u soml! room to pr011ement or redecorating I a yau can think of can be yours wltf\ a low cost Home Improvement i..o.n from the First National Bank of Orange Courvy. MAIN OFFICE breathe'" I First National Bank=:-. 111 .. ~ ............ ~,,., Mtrnbef of F.D IC. At the Plaza in downtown Orange COSTA MESA: Mesa Verde & Adams IRVINE: University Dr. & Michelson Dr. LAGUNA HILLS: Altera Parkway & San Diego Freeway 8AUME & MERCIER (3ENEVE 3'~01ta-ti11 g;-;," Telle a IOt about the man ••• 14K GOLD WATCHES BY BAUME & MERCIER Opt for the circle? Or the rectangle? Either Is an outstanding example of Baume & Mercier watoh artistry at its best. Ct)oose the satiny-smooth mesh bracelet masterpiece or the stunning re- ctangle case with heraldic design chain links, hand woven. Each affirms the best in taste and quality. ..... Co.He,..,.. c... ..... MMOll -c-.. . .._..,_ B..,..._ncar .. ¥114 • ~T-• Authorized Aoancv lo< 8al6ne & U.rcler WatchH First Federal Savings has alway• been ~ •s a &real place to build financW eecpfhy. After all, we pay maximum Interest on insured savinp. And have 1ix different savings plans to tbooae from. But we also offer ftee cuatomer serviees that a.re designed to save you dm~ file our Telematic 'Uansfer Service•, for inttanee. This convenience . aUowt you to trarufer funds from your bank checking account to Fint Federal- jwt by making a phone call. No tripe to the bank are needed. You can use it to take money out of your savlnp account and transfer it back into your bank account, too. Then there's our Check-.A,Month Propiam••. It provides a check each mooch to anyone you specify. So it'• a fast and euy way to take care of fOIU}arly occurring bllls. Of coune, any dm.e you viik Fint Peden.I yQu'U nve d.me. Tlltli's more than enouah free park~~ our offices provide a pteuant and efffdeiit atmotpbere for conductlii1 fl.nan.clal mauen. Ptu1, our "next cuatomu" Uno IVftenl u &lt1aya ln use durfna buty periodl. . Pint Fidm.J S.viftp. lm't ,it time you awud 1avin1t wlm ua? •taooo MlNIMOM BAl.ANCI UQUlllD ••lJOOO MlNIMtlM BALA.NCB UQt1lll.ID ·· 111 r · Tueeday. ~rnbef e. 1971 By Phll fnterlondf Beaten WVe 1'.ills Mate, AcqUitted . ''ff•w'a the meet.Ina 1olng'! Send In the clowna. Does that I · 8DIWtl' your question?" MARQUETI'E. Mich. CAP) -"I sUU loved him, rl&bt up until I shot him,·' says the second lllchlsan woman to 10 free in reeetit ween after ktlllns a twaba.nd or ex-husband who beat her. Sharon McNemey. acquitted of s~ond-delfff murder in th• Feb. 11 1Jaylnc ot ber hua~ud, Gtor1e, detcribed blm in an Interview u a man with a ~·CUY reputation that be couldn't -or wou1dn't-1ba.ke. "BE HATED UFE, BATBO the beavln•s of it," she aald. "He would have been completely hap- py llvlng In the mountains by hlmHll without the fruatrattom oC bills and jobs and people.'' A 118.fquette County Circuit Court judCt aald the state taJled to prove that Mn. McNemey, 4.2, was not acting In .self-deferuJe. She bu returned to work u a secretary. L=th, Fr!lncine Hushes oC Luslnf waa she said, McNemey would go for one of their three children and "I'd intervene and set the bnmt of lt." MU. -McNERNEY SAID BEft husband, 1 5· foot-9 ironworker described by a policeman u "bullt like an ox,·• was a good provider 1Ad father and a 1teady worker. But in the rouah minin1 coun- try of Mlchi1an'1 Upper Peninsula, be was always being Ct\811enged to f11ht. Mn. McNerney said ber husband fired a iun ai her once when aht said she was leavtn1 him. The police took bJm to jail, but be sent word that he would ldll her If she testified a1ainstbJm. On the day abe abot him, abe said, McNerney slapped her around and warned her, "OK, you bitch. Tb.la time you won 't be able to tell the copa beccause I'm going to kill you." .MRS. M~ERNEY SAID SHE tbouaht he meant it. She g,ot a shotgun from their bedroom and fired twice. Then ahe went to police and confetaed. '*Tbe only thins l ever 1-'d ll tbat if you lovt • man, you'll take an awful lot," Mn. McNtrney ~ said. "U you're eoing to nm away, then Just do It. If ~OU 're ioln8 to take it, stay tbete and be quJ.t •ut , t .. . . Acne Care Medical Oinks Worked for Kimberfy . found ent by reuon of insanity in the &f'l9h .death of'ber ex-husband who, abe ieatified, beat ber ·------,-------------- durinl fhelr marria1e and contloued to dO 10 after their divorce. Mrs. Hughes baa been found mentally competent and was freed from custody. MRS. McNEaNEY SAID qa husband, 4S when he died, started beatinJ ber~when she ~s 16 and engaged to him. ''He apologiaed and cried and said he'd never do it a1a.tn. I forgave hlm because I believed him,''. she .. id in the interview with the Detroit Free Press .. ; · But the beallogs became more brutal and more frequent -an average or on~ a month. Sometimes, . i~QUALITY lftlUrGnce DMVSets Saturday Services :~ at reasonable prices! AUTO MADl•OYllH ........ s116. COLLICH STUDIMT - Stt4•ll OYllt JO • PHYIAR '168. l"llYl.U YACHTS LARGE BOAT DISCOUNTS EXnNOEO WORLD WIDE CRUISING COMMERCIAi. BOATS ®WHY PHONE LONG DISTANCE? @) SMlCO INSURA.N(f ; We c• arrange to hOYe y,... ogency file tranlfft"r'ed to our Orang. County office with no policy c.._. or inten-uptiOll of C0¥fl'OIJI! S~CRAMENTO CAP) -California will baye nine Department of Motor Vehicle offices in urban areas open Saturdays Jtartiog in January under a two- year experiment, state officials say. Starting Jan . 7, Tueaday -tbrou1h· Saturday service wlll be offered at these offices: Daly City, Oakland- Coliseum, Santa Clara in Northern California and Winnetka, Ventura, Culver City, We•t Cov· ina, Westminster and Fontana In Southern California. AT A CAPITOL news BOB PALEY 546 3205 conference, DMV or-MOltTH OC • • ncials acknowledged & ASSOC, IMC. SOUTHOC-642-6500 ~:~:·>;~~;mJ>!~e~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~~~ about their changed ..: __ hours but added that overall the employees' ·,.------------------------------... reapouewas poaltive. ,What is :Lifeline Telephone ,Service? I . Lifeline is a telephone service for resi- dence customers of Pacific Telephone. It allows the customer to make up to 80 local calls for •2.50 a month. Each additional call costs 5¢. In addition to the monthly rate. installation or other charges will appl}t If Lifeline fits your needs. call your Pacific Telephone Service Represcntatl·1e. @Pacific~ . As a former acne sulferet I know the Importance of a clean looking complexion. I had suffered from the effects of acne over the last ftve years. I'd tl1ed the IT\llny over-the-coonter creams and cleansers and was also under a docto(s c.are; being treated with antibiotics and ultra-violet uittc treatments. none ol which did anything for my a1..:ie problem. Thats When I decided to try Acne C.ue Medic.'I Clinks. Using an applied treatment of two drugs. Vitamin A Add and 8enzoyi Peroxide. my face cleared up In only 8 weeks. Selleve me it wori(sl Acne Care Medic.al Cllnlc.s c.an wori( for you too. Kimberly Butram Former Acne Care Medial Clinic patient jack Krirf1er, M.D .. b a lloald Cerrtlled Dennarologlw. and 1111$ pr.ctlc.-Oell'l'\Atology Ill Southern Calfoma for ~r ~ )'MI'S. Ul'lder the dfreaton al Of. Kramer. ten Aerie "'1e Medic.Ill Clnla hlYe beef\ opened eJ!du~ for lhe treAlmerlt of .x;ne. Acne Care Medical Cllnlcs m . BRCNTWOOO (Zll)8ZO·Z69l •COVINA 713)%<>·17/I INC.UWOOO (Zll) 673·0601 • l.AKLWOOO l 1J19ZS-8J7 7 VAN NUYS f21l) 786·5'11 COSTA MCSA (714) 7Sl·ll63 • f'UUlRTON (714) 870·2261 SAN DIE.GO (714) 1&7-4263 •SAN DIE.GO (714) 173-1600 HUNTINGTON MACH (7")842-142l TOU. f1W: NUM8Vt 1·800-422·'114 • .. ., A guide to community church•• ..•. and their events •ppear1 8•turd•y• ~·: .f In the DAI LY PILOT I . , The hour switch was . _______________ -------------------------~: created by a new law ·The Team Wants to Arrange ~Loan ... For You. \\~S\~t.SS Cott Klolle Oon He<tog eemwo Brown Oou9 8utley l•n«tl Blue Whether it's a business. opportunity or a new investment. an Equity loan on your home or other property may give you tne cash to take advantage of it. We specialize In secondary real e•tate financing for people who already own prime residential property and have a betttr-th•n- average income. Jf y9u qualify, a1k a member of The Team for detail1. We may be able to arrange a loan of up to 80 percent of the mar.ket value of )'O\U' property-at attractive rates. Call nowl , I' ' which called for the varied hours under a two-year experiment culminating in a report to the legislature. . THE OMV br1e0y ex· perlmented with Satur· day hours at a few offices about two years ago, but this plan will be the first Jengtby use of the Tuesday-through Satur- day hours. spokesman Lionel Holmes said. Whenever an office ls shut on Monday, .ervice wlll be available at another DM" office wtthln 15 miles, he said. THE DEPARTMENT also 1ald that beginning Jan. 3, 20 omcea will have varied hours - Monday, Tuesday and f'riday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m ., Thuntfays from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Wed· neadays u follows: AW.ood Oty, SM P'rancl-, $en 1 ... ~O...._.,Welll<lt CIMll, lot 0..-. #IMW>~ Vlew, $ell J•H, Cer"'lcll••I, t4••111orae, Cotntlleft. P'lll..,. .... .......,. -fOe.m. , .. ia.m,; ,..,~-..~ encl Mol!t-IO 1 .. fll. lo. D.m. · In addition, another 67 of the st.ate's 147 DMV of- fic11 now open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Thuqda.,. wUl commue those hourw, and the n-m ainlnl a> olllcea will keep 8 Lm. to S p.m . bouta Mondays ~h Frtda1S. HELLO, LAKE FOREST, LAGUNA HILLS, LEISURE WORLD! MERCURY SAVINGS NEW OFFICE-NOW OPEN! FREE We'll laminate your Social Sec;urity CNd or othar valwsble wallet documents In permanent plnJtlc. No obllgalion-)Ult drop In. FREE We have colorful up-to-~te freeway maps (or evetyene. Balloons for the youngstm, too. FREE Mooey ordm, travelen checks, (Minimum belenee required.) Also Tax DcfGJtd Rdrement ~nts. free trans/er of accoontl. BECAUSE YOU COULDN'T WAIT •.• Mercury Savings w\11 be building aJlirge, beautiful bulldlng at Lake Forest Ori11e and the San Diego Freeway. Whll. It Is being constructed a t&mpowy offloe haa bun opened et Lal<e Forest Dr. and Aspan St (near Roddleld Rd.) )wt east of the San Diego FNeWay. W•r• a~ association and we're here to serve you. MOST CONVENIENT HOURS Wukd• from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and open every Saturday, 10e.m.to4p.m. •• •• ... • ~1 ·~ ' Je OM. Y Pl\.OT !f.."(.'c.,~ LOH 1 BEN'S BRANCH, Ark. E"Hryone know• that a factory wtn surely fail ii it Is not located near the interstate, or at leaat on the bank.I of a areal waterway. Ben '1 Branch is hardly a 1reat waterway. Nor Is Bil Creek, which you have to ford twice t.o get lo Ben's Branch, alnce Bil ~Creek nows right across the road l~adlnc here. The road ls hardly Uie tnterstate, either, as lt ls , made of unmistakable dirt. EVEN SO, THE factory operated here by Charles Chria· tian and his brother-In-law, Jack Mccutcheon. flourishes. "We have all the work we can handle." Charles Christian said. ''We're way behind on orders now.'' Charles Christian and Jack McCutcheon make chairs. The way they make chairs is as old aa the hills, the Ozark hills that surround them, isolate them, comfort and in.spire them, and, back ln pioneer times, 1ave birth to tbelr vanbhln1 craft. THEY VSB NO nalla or screws or even glue to hold tbelt chalrl to1etber, yet they seem a1 dura· ble as the hllla, too. Hurulredl of chairs made by Jim Nichols, Charlea Christian'• father·ln·law, •re stlll in dally use in homes tbrou1hout the Ozarks, and to are some of the chairs made by Jim Nichols' father. Jim Nichols, at 73, still wan- ders out t.o his shop occasionally lo make a chair, just to feel worthwhile, but ls aa,Usfled that Charles and Jack were good learners and the venerable Ozark art entrusted to him lives on. THE CHAJ&S VARY UlUe in design. They are made of native hardwood, oak generally, or black walnut, with ladder backs gently curved and seats woven of inch-wide strips cut from the in· ner bark of the bitternut hickory. The desiain and the materials have satisfied the eye and the sense of fruiallty of 1eneraUons, and conUnue to satlafy. ' ''Uncle Jlm told me be never ln all bil life had one of bil chain brou1ht back for repair," Charles ChrUtian said. ''Well, neither have we. •'The lee!ret ia knocking the parts together. Tbe four upright posts are gree'~ wood, un. seasoned wood. The rounds that bold them together are seasoned in an oven. As the green wood dries it gets stouter and stouter. There's no give, none at all.'' SURE ENOUGH, A ChriJtian or McCutcbeon chair, and even an ancient Nichols chair, can support the weight of a doubtin1 critic balancing the thing on one lea. without the slightest wobble. They seem to be made for tillini back in, feel on a porch rail, the best way to witness an Ozark sun· set. Though Charles and Jack a.re Returns to County Fluor Completes Move When the final handful of pe<>· pie moved into Fluor Corp. 's in· ternatsonal headquarters build· ing 1n lrv1nc on Monday, the 65· vcar-old firm returned to its birthplace 1n Orange County. The corporation formerly was head. quartered m the City or Com· merce. In 1912, John Simon Fluor Sr .. s tarted Fluor Construcllon Co., a general contractor, in Santa Ana, a few miles from the new head· quarters at Jamboree Boulevard and the San Diego Freeway. Today, f'luor Corp a nd its sub- s1d i a r1cs employ mor e than 21 .000 people 1n United Statei; and ;ibroad. TUE 10-STORY headquarters buildiug houses about 600 employees; the headquarters group of Fluor Engineers and Contructors. Inc., the largest subsidiary; and Fluor Drilling Services. The 275,000-square·foot building ls octagonal in shape, with the eastern three sides re· cessed on floors one through eight. The building shares a 105·acre site with the SolJlhern California division of Fluor E&C, the cor· poration's largest operating unit. The two mirrored buildlnes house a total of 4,500 employees and are enclosed in silver reflec· tive glass, chosen for its esthellc and energy-saving features. Fluor subsidiaries design and build a range of such facilities as processing plants for the oil and gas industr y, petrochemical plants, mines and ore processing facilities, electric utility power plants. complexes to turn coal ln· to synthetic fuels and fertilizer plants. FLUOR'S LARGEST AND most recent acquisilion of Daniel Inte rnational Corp. of Green· ville, S.C., added a subsidiary ln industrial contracting and operating primarily in the southeastern United Stales. Other Floor firms are involved in contract drllllnc. engineering and construction of1 offshore structures, marine terminals and plpelin,es, and dee}fwate.r oil production systems to help meet world energy needs. Fluor has worked on every con· tinent but Antarctica alljf bas a backlog of more than $8 billion. COMMENTING ON the return to Orange County, J .R. Fluor, corporation chairman, said, "When we started looking for a new home several years ago, we surveyed our employees. They picked this area over all others in Southern California. "We are here by choice, not through lack of alternatives." radio P•f er WIDE AREA COVERAGE Stalling Chryslers Admitted by Company O~GE CO.-L.A. '17.10 a mom .. &Ma.I .... DETROIT <AP > -IC your Chrysler Corp. car keeps stalling, it has a lot of company. says a report in a Detroit newspaper. newspaper said , quoting Chrysler documents. The company is fixing some of the cars free under a selective and un· publicized repair program, the newspaper said. ~O DEPOSIT ON APPROVED CREDIT Design Oaws could lead to chronic engine stalling problems in more than 1.3 million Dodge and Plymouth cars built in the last three years, the Detroit Free Press said. Chrysler Corp. sold 1.3 million cars during 1976 in the United Stat.es. A Chrysler spokesman said the re- pairs had not been publicized because they were not considered part of a program. "vie were treating it as we would any other customer problem in that we dealt with lt when it showed up, just as you deal with Intestinal nu on a one-to-one basis," he said. THE PROBLEMS EXIST ori 1975, 1976 and some 1977 models with 318· cublc·inch Y·8 engines or ~-cubic· inch s ix-cylinder engines, the Most of the cars involved are. Valiant.is. Darts, Aspens and Volares. MAKE YOUR YEAI IEHD CHAAITAILI GolFT COUNT! TM nffd- 1977.71 YOllHI wort& SH,000 Swiwu•OCJ pool wloMn SZ I ,000 w .... ·• FHMss c ....... $5,000 Cc+11Wp1 $5,000 CASH -REAL ESTATE -SECuatnts Y041c .. -...1tw •Hw-•I ~ ,_.. c1-m'ty YMCA ORANGE COAST YMCA JJOO u..f •enlty Dri•• ~wpwt lffch. Ce UHO ,,._. UZ.HtO ._.,.-~ .. ncAI ' (COMMODITY CALL ) For the soph1slicaced rrnder there'" onlv one numher to rcmemher-OURS 540-8121 FREE TU SHELTER SEMINAR NB Business To Get Preview Four local buslneasmen will preview businw In 1978 at a Thursday morning ~minar sponsored by the Newport Center Auociation. The breakfaat meeting "MU be held from 8 to 10 a.m. ln the Newporter Inn's Carousel Room. Jerome Ne'mlro, president of Bullock.'• Wihbire, will dl3cus' the outlook in retail sates; Joe Rothman, manllger or the Ma.rrtott Hotel, will talk about the coming year in tourism: Peter Anderson, vice .president of the French Bank of California, will discuss the affect of internaticmal tracte-Oll Oran1e County ~ John Macnab or M.aenab:-Irvine Realty will discuss what the cominc year will brln1 ln real estate. • For further Information, call tbe aaaoclatlon at 6-40-1861. THE FAMILY CIRCU& By Bil Keane partners -Jaelt tends to , apeciallze ln 1trat1bt chaln. Charlet in rockera -th• two work in aepar~Le •bops near thW' bom~ on opposite 1lde1 of the• cretk. The Christiana and McCutcheooa repreaeqt the en• Ure population of Ben '1 Branch. At one time the community was more populoua, with lts own post offlce. The deserted post ofnce became Charles'• shop when be went into the chair buslne11 full tJrne lS yea.re a•o: now he bas to drive 10 mllea on that rutted dirt road to the hamlet of Mount Judea (pronounced Mount Judy locally> to mall hla chain to customers too far away, or too lackln1 ln nerve, to <lrlve to Ben 'a Branch to aet them. "WE GET ORDERS from all o'{_er." Charles said, •'from peo-pl~ we don't even know. t iueas word iels around." Charles Christian ls an •Iliac· ing redhead of as years, 11 honest and down-to-earth as the chain he makes and the shop he makes them in. It is a cluttered old building, rich with the smell of sawdust. Not only are bis cbalrs handmade but also the toots he uses to make them: a drill blt that was the tooth of an old hay rake, a boWne vat that was the fuel tank of a truck, a rack f9r bending the boiled wood, a harid· carved hickory mallet for knock· ing the parts together atop a huge oak s\ump hauled indoors. "WHY, CHARLE,S, with some modem macbinery and a crew ol helpers you could expand this in· to a really big operaUan, couldn't you?" The chairma.ker winced. "Then they wouldn't be my chairs," he said. OZARK CHAIRS -"The secret is knocking the parts tog.ether. The four upright posts are ereen wood, un· seasoned wood. The rounds that hold them together are seasoned in an oven. As the green wood drtes it gets stouter and stouter. There's no give, none at all." That's Charles Christian at work. Over The Countf>r NASO Ustinqs 19 IP. f>c190Pd '"' 11'> ~,,, 1'"1.. 1''> Pr09rp 7\9 7~ Pb$vNC '11 ~. Purt8en 6 1 Pult>CAp "'· 10'-11 Quellnnl •'• ,. Raoe!IPr 141'> IS.... 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NwtEnr7.20 1 s l7"•-1·, S ... lnpl .so.. 1 10 -v, GTEllf 7..... 2' 21*-l't llora~ .De 4 11 IV.-* Nw£nct2 20 7 ... • SFelrrt AOb 6 Sll Sl'"-l''o Gl'f'lpl 1.= .. &110 ISll\... •• Krell t! 9 IJ .. ¥1-""' Baird J.IS I 221 s~.:: •• ~W.I ·'° I f ISYI-'• GT1t0 I. ~ tSO n"9-~ Krcielllr. .. 6 10\'t.. ... Wllndwt ., S 31 -\t ~...-;::lf 11 1'1 •1 1Jt •l't• .. ICfOOff ~ • ft1 zse...... Ppf 2.90 • • 21'h '• I J ,901> SI :u\ti+ ''1 l(ullf111 I 11 u ....... -Ml.I lf lJ 2' 12'. • S.lt()ll .21 1 J Ill SO' 21 -lll.o l(y-• 4$ ~--HwMW 1.JOIJ 22 u•. t . S.vEtP 111 1 ' llt2.S2 .. U ~I t V! -t.~ -St t I 60 3' ~ 111 l P w II f I 2 1 J l.r._f U ' 1*-14 f'l\,I~ I 2f4 1'~ -•• lSf i ..... Df~.~. ~ -.. -_ ~ ~I•"' .. 12• ,-. ..... NllcOf'.,. ,:i:.. n ........ i. c: .17• • tt• r.~ '• ,.., l..401i 5' 1;~ ~ 1,1,~·i~·~ 11e•~:T ~: 1=:: "' -7 • 12111-46 r .. , .. •!~-\\ G-.i I , .. 4'Yt-.. I .,, ·~. J!. t rnE ~ '· .,..,, I_ ... ,: a nJ l I + ~ ~-1 'j J: ~-~ :r ':n .. ,41 H\ to-~· Vt I' t .(• + I • U O'n-fo.2' ,.. ···-W)11· .10 .. '~-'"' L' ... "'r H!·t ,. ~Ir• 'f.I' l is -'' ~~ '1 if: .d:J: : ii ~'n: ~ Ef:~ NI'! It~ i ,. ;:: 1i ~· fI~!: a ?·1 ,t·~ .it' ·~~ ... 4 .. 1,1-.; • 7 f•IU '•Ut ;JI·· J ~" li!l~ -!101t * ~.~e.tm DAILY PILOT ,4J J • • • timum 81 JOHN ctJNl.Dr ..,....._....,.. Jf you wani aome relief from the b.aDdwrltlllJ tbat s~tn• to be inherent in moat economic roncuta, you &bou.ld " read t.heH dayathe rel)Ortl ~:,~8i out of General Moton. G &I means aenerally m cent when appUed to the economic ouUook. ''1'1lere Is no doubt that the U .s. economy and the automobile lndwsU)' are tn a dynamic period," one otnelal report atat.s. DYNAMICT BUT ISN'T TUE automotive lnduatry baraaaed by all aorta of aeemin1ly lnsurmmmtable')rob- lem1? lsft"t the eeonomh: expansion a 1bakey old creature trembllnJ alon.1on arthrlttcJolnt.sT . Just a few daya 110, Thomas A. Murphy, the GM chairman, tnued a yeueod statement lll•t stated natl)': "~ral Moton, u well as the automobile industry in the United Stutes, ln caltodar year 1978, will aet te(Ords surpHsing the marks now being poe~ tn 1977 ... M u.rpby ia making a tradJUon of such 1taternenta. He is in effect saying that wa must remain aware of the proble1111 but not overlook what is rtsht with the etonomy. He said the aame th.ins• wt year' and before too. To ffiuatrate, ln Murpby'swordl: "WE CONTINtJE TO BB DEEPLY concerned about the unemployment cow - rate ... " but we should also note that "the percent of the working age population that bol~ jobs also approxlmates the highest level ln peaceUme l\latoty. •· And to demonatrate furthlr: "We are aware that many uncerialnttes about national economic policy currently cloud the outlook tor 1978 and have the potenilaJ fol' tnipalring bu.sl.neu and comumer confl"'ence. We remain confident, howeveT', that these un· certainties wiU be ~solved by soundly based programs in the national in- terest." There I~ a good chance that Murphy and GM will say the same things next year too. At any rate, lhe prospect is there. An official GM repe>rt stat.es ••General Motors it confident about ms and the years btyood., • Propaganda 1n the punu.it of Mil· inlerest, sq t.be cyolct. Wbat cbolce bas MUOtiY a company of GM't slie but to promote good news about the economy. Batt news u.ndermina buyer confidence: good news sells can. · THERE'S 8AltDLY ANY PUBPOSE in den.yins the Uk II hood that this is an ingredient in tbe OM rttlpe. Wby, oae of il!l former chairmen once slated publicly that u GM 1oes so goes the nation. But GM is al.so puttios its money up. and that you must respect. Dollar's Dip Cited . In Market Pl~e NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices tumbled today unde.r selling pr~sure blamed partly on the dollar's continued alump in foreign exchange markets. , Tti~ Dow Jo~s avera1e of30 industrial• was down 14.12 pointst.o806.91 · Loteri 1wamped gainers by a S-1 margttt amonc New York Stock Exchange·llsted lssues.; The dollar. whicb reglstered a 28-month low by one: measure on Monday, PQsted some further declines In Europe today A~••IAad~r• AMa•tCAN l.eAOaltS • Nl!W vo•K <M'I· S.lfl. 'p.m. l)tlU and nel CllMIOll flf II<! IHI ltlOlt Kii .. Amarlct11 MiOC.11 El.cMnOf 1~.-. lfedlnt n•l'-lly el mor• INll SI 1:1...0jlM .. , •• IU,aOD 311'> -Vi b l,., Ind ,.... lt,fOD •1 • + 'It M<Cllll Oii... ... 11,000 P • -~ Oomo ... "'., , ... 000 U\o -21 t Sy11ftx Corp... • 43, 100 21 -.., 0• IOPr.cl .. 42,IOO l1 -~ lllllrum m .... . 41,toO IV. ~ l'o TOCllPll NA...... »,tot tit -:lit ~ eiptor ••• , 12,100 I~ + "" FIJOlt Oii •• ,.. JO.JOO 26 -~ DoaolonnA l'erage• ~tw Y-(AP) ,._I Oow..JoflH •-eon s OCICS r Clow O'G JD INI °rl':.1 ~Ir.ti ~-.ti-If.I} :10 Tr" 111'2 114,'5 20U9 z10.n-I S2 U VU 112.7• 11U:Z llUO 112.40-O.ff "'s~ 214.44 m. u 11u> no.1•-• •7 ..... •• • •.• ............. 2.23'.>00 Tr•n • .... . ... . • .• ....... »1,700 Utll' ...................... m ,400 "''" ..... ........... ..... '"'''* NEW YORI( IAPI SALES ~V:, r~~ .. ~~~~ .. :~.~.~«1123.~,::.&., I =lout city • • • • • • •• • • • • .. • • • "· 160,00I 119' ... -.. • • • • • • .. • .. .. • • ". '50.000 .,,, ....................... 19,710.-Yttr •to .... .. . ..... . . ....... ,.,IA0,400 I: n:r:.~::.:::·::.::·::··.,.~:m:m , 016 lo •t1 ... ,.,..... ... . .,..,,,..,°" ms .. dote • • .. • .. • • .. .. .. 4-»tM.- MCAT AlllllC DID NIW YORK IAl"I . ., . . ... ltlbtalce Nltt T .. Ced .. DEAR PAT: I ironed my own lhirt the otber morning when my wife neclected ber chorea. Only when finished. I turned the lrcln to "Hl&h0 wben l thought I was turning it off. What did 30 boun of leavln1 the iron on at full power coet me? K.T.,Costa1desa . . , Pool Plan ............ Country music .singer Webb Pierce says he'll build a S1 million replica on Nash ville 's Music Row of his famous guitar-shaped swim· ming pool. Officials in his tome town banned tour buses ft'om stopping to see the real thing. Approldmatety 4t centa fOI' a i.• wau lroL Soa&bern CaUfonala EdlM>D .U1aatel Uaat the I.roll ac&u.Jly used eledrlcUy for oa.ly about lt boun becaaae ll u lllermo1latlcall.Y eoatrollecl. One kWowatt (1,0tt watts> laoar of efectrlclty C09U fom cents. DEAR PAT: Can you tell me why it's not possi- ble to use a mlcrowave oven for home cannJnc? I do , a lot or canning and am dt.appolnted to bear from others tbatl can't take advanta8e offast microwave cookl.ng fortbe canning process. P.L .. Irvine You'd be tak.ln1 too nau7 cbuca by aalnc your microwave oven to do taome caDDln1. As yoa know, microwave cooldD1 creates beat wl&hln tbe food dae to molecalar vlbratloa caused by ---------microwaves. Tbe microwave. pasa tbroagb a cllu· Judge Off Wallaces' Trial nel lDto tbe oven cavity, where they an. dlltrlbated 1J'y a faa or sUrrer, then absorbed by tbe fat. 1111ar and Uqakl molecules ln tbe food. If )'OD can lD a microwave Oftll tile food may beat tbrougb. but there may be unevea dlatrtbotton of •aJdmam beat atdficleet to kill barmfal mkro· orgaabms. Standard cann.lq met.bods allow all food molecules to reacb tJae bolll.ac temperature. bU't microwave cooklng does DOt. Jan also may burst and explode due to tbe lntease vlbratlon of tbe food molecules darlnl cann.ln1. MONTGOMERY, Ala. <AP ) -The Alabama Court of Civil Appeala says that Family Court Judge John W. Davis III ,nust disqualify himself from hearing divorce 1uits filed by Gov. George C. Wallace and bis wife Cornelia. But the court refu.ed to say Monday whether the divorce trial, when it is heard, should be open to the public. Car Chase Ends In Fatmity CITY OF INDUSTRY (AP) -The personalized license plate on the IT SAID that because cum pied plckup truck .in Davis already ruled wha~h ~year·ol_d Daniel against an open trial Arrigo of Covma was that questlon could noi fatally injured told most be brought up at this of t~e sad story. RACE time. However. it could ON, at read. come up on appeal or California Highway when another judge Patrol officers say Ar· takes the case. rigo was clocked going 65 The unanimous de· miles an hour on the cision from the appellate westbound Pomona court did not say there Freeway and chased for was evidence that Davis nearly eight miles. has shown bias or He turned otr his prejudice. But it said he headlights and ac· should have excused celerated to more than himself to avoid any •P· lOQ miles an hour in an pearanceofblas. e r r 0 r t t 0 e 1 u d e · patrolmen, they said. MRS. WALLACE'S His pickup finally went lawyers raised the ques-out or control on a curv· lion of bias and prejudice ing transition road fro~ because Davis was ap. that freeway onto the pointed family court San Gabriel River judge by the governor -Freeway, went orr an although he later was embankment and flipped elected on his own -and over. also because the judge's Arrigo was thrown father, Dr. John W. from his vehicleanddled Davis Jr., has been one.. a short time later, they of Wallace's physicians. said. _m_ BAUME & MERCIER GENE VE ~~a 111» l i1/ ~1e Remarkable watch•• .•. 14K gold ••• tor men of equ1lly remarkable taate • •·Got.a probUm1 Thia torlt• lo P.bl Dcnm. P.at t.irill cut rfd f<JPf, ocUifto 'fh'.aiuwtrt ond.oction J10U nffd to ~'MlflQdttfu ,oHr1uallU,ont.( buaMeu. MdU " your que1tlonl to P.at Dunn, At Your Sfnrict, Orungc CO<Ut Dolly PUot, AO. Boz lStJO, Cana Mi.a, CA 92626 • .44 mony letten aa possible will be an.swerfd, but phonad 1nquirfe1 or lettnc not mclut.bng th• rtadn'• fuU name. oddresa. and bw:mtn hour•' phone mlmbn'cczrmot t>econm«ed. Thucolumnawear•dai· 111 ezcept Saturda11•." · Need Af,il1 Note Be.tr JIU t>EAR PA~: My doctor tells me l netd a bear· tnc atd. I vquely remember readint in your co19 µinn about a bearing aJ4 rattna report of sotne klad that one could request, but I can't recall anythln1 else about t.bia. WW you fill me in? W.E., Bunttntton Buch Tbe VderDI Admtnlatratlon lafonnatloD Of. flee, W........_, O.C. MUt, CiD ptovkle JOO with the cllQ'ellt VA report oa -..Ur a.kb. Eacll year the VA pablbbes m.lta of Its own evaludoa of beart.nc aldl It .... pa:rtbased oe bid.I fer ue by mWtary 'fe&eraas. Tbe devkes are nted on tile bull of elfedlveaea, price ud other tadon de· 1lped to help tile to111ame1' learn about Jaeartac aldt before maklD& a pmcllue. "' A"otd Gdt ... Wppal DEAR PAT: How do you tell a &ood barber col· lece from a bad one? l 'm interested in attending one, but I don't know an)'thina about bow they are licensed or what the requirements for study 1hould be. C.F., Costa Mesa Barber collece ea..rollment reqlllre11M11ta aad a Uat of approved, Ueeued coUeges cu be~ from tbe State Board of Barber Exam.IDen, 10it 0 St., Room A·5t7, Sacramento, Calli. tS8H, or by pboal.DI <ZIS> f20-U53. A baJ'ber tollqe JDtnac&ol' mut post 9*11 lall reell~red Nrbet llceae ud ha· atnactor'• certlflcate ID a ~ place ai tbe college. Be sve to elteek qaa::t"of all ha· atncton at aay eoUe1e )'09 r aUeadJae. \'oa coat allo ask for ••mes ol sracl••tee ud COii• tad them reprdln• tM quality el blatndlla. SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATlON laYM PAAIMIW CIMTM ....... Drbe•M1c•1h• 1714) 552-5325 t.A.uMAtlLU LtiflM ... ..... ........, ... ...,., 1714) 581-4100 - • .. • DNL~LOt _, .• -snorts ------~·~...-.,----~----~--~~~...-~~~.~ n !ngels Trade BontlS ta So HONOLULU-The California Angel• c;onsummated tb• lonl· rumored story that 8obby Boods would .not be wltb them 1n 197....-tradlnf ~e Riverside pro- duct to the Chlcato Wbite Sox:. Generat manager Buzzle Bava.st, in h1a llnt .(llaJor efforts slnce taklna the rew tor tbe de- parted Haro' Dalwn, allo eave up Thad Bosley and Dick Dotson. In return the Anglls aet 24· year-old rlghthander Chris· Knapp~ 2$-year-old rltbthander Dave l'TOSt and catcher Brian Dow~. a product of ldaanolla (Ana~eiin) Wgb School. Bonda bad 1luued 37 bome runs and scored U5runsln19'17. Bavul'a primary rea1on for maJdna the atunnlnc deal was beca~e of Bonda' epparent ln· tentloa to play out bl' opt.ion If he didn't ha" h1s $3.5 million re- questful!iUed. Bonds had Ju.st concluded a ·couldll't Get -The Big Play, __ Says Col~s Boss. . ,.,..... MIAMI (AP> -Leroy Harris said he ran so far ''I was lookit>g for a filling station to gas up" in galloping 77 yards to key Miami's divlalon-tylnlJ 17-6 Na· tional Football League victory over the Baltimore Colla Monday night. , ...... • __ F_R_E_o_o_1E_SO_L_o_M_o_N_LA_T_c_HE_s_o_N_T_o_A_M_1A_M_1_P_A_s_1_. __ The Dolphins led by just four points and were struggling to keep control of the ball with 1:42 left in the final period when Harri•. a rookie, started a plunae through the middle. I ' BaaketlJall Outlook "I managed to get away from some Colla and bounced to the outside,,. be taid. ''I plcked up a block from Du.riel Harris and saw Nat Moore in front <>f me." From there, the 220-poand run· ning back outran Baltimore's de· tensive secondary. Miami coach Don Shula, savor· ing the victory that left the • Dolpbim Ued witb Bal~ore in the American Confe.rence East, said Harris was playina with a Saturd14y night's 88-79 victory pulled leg muscle. "l'd hate to Bruins, Irish Pace Saturday's Agenda ' . LOS AN~ELES <AP) -The pot.ential for perfect basketball seasons is there for both Notre Dame and UCLA, if you discount a four-year habit of splitting the home-and-home series. Both schools have 4-0 records this season, going into their Saturday night game at Pauley Pavilion on the UCLA eampwi. Notre Dame is ra~,.t.hkd among the nation's coJl~ges lo The Associated Press poll this week and UCLA is rated fifth. "We won't work as hard this !week because it is final exam eek," Cunningham said Mon- ay. But be gave his regulars lots t work in last weekend's vlc- ories over Colorado and Santa Iara. UCLA's scoring leaders at 17.5 oint& per game, $-foo.t-10 orward David Greenwood and uard Roy HaDlilton. each layed the full 40 minutes ir. * * * hakeup at SC ter 2 Losses over Santa Clara. · see him healthy," said Shula. Last season Nolre Dame won Baltimore coach Ted in Los Angeles 66·63 and UCLA Marchibroda said his teatn captured the game at South Bend played "decent football," btat 70·85. was hampered by tbe ume "We are looking forward to bugabqp that Jed to lut week's playing them," Cunningham said 28-13 loe.s to Denver. ''We Just of the Irilh. ''They have no Vieak· clldn 't •et a chance ati a big nesses 14 our opinJon. 'l'he7 are play.'" big, a""ng and experienced. Colt.a' quarterback Bert Jones. They run their offense very well . who passed for 189 yards but was and pressure you man·to-man." stopped without a touchdown, The full-court zone press, answered no questions, waJ.kinc which UCLA used during many aUenUyintoashower. or its national championship Harris, a S.10, 220-poUQd player years under John Wooden, has from Arkansas-Stat.e, brote open been W5ed extensively by former a tJtbt game when &e •tarted a Wooden assistant Cunningham. plun1e ~ the middlf'. rolled to and be says he's happy -11.h the the outside and slmpl)' ran over way the players have handfedit. Ba 1 ti more safety Lyle "We 80l out of It Saturday· . Blackwood, picked up blockln1 night because we thoupt Santa and rambled to the end zone. Clara was converting too often Harrla lained 140 yards on 17 against it," Cunningham aald, carrie,. "I'd say there's a good posslbili· The Dolphins held a tenuous ty we'd use it. asa!nat Notre 10·6 Jead tbrou.ii much of the Dame. aame on Bob Grt~·s 15-yard "I don't feel you can be effec· scoring paq to Andre Tillman in tive changing a lot of thln&s from the second quarter and Garo week to week,'• Cunningham Yepremlan's 27-yerd field goal in said. the opening period. Baltimore scored on Tonl Linhart field goals of 32 and 2'1 yards, both in the first period. The victory left Miami and Baltimore with 9-3 recorda, one game ahead of New England, M . AU. three teams bave only two games remalnin1. Miami eould wrap. up a dlvislon tiUe by win· ning its next two games against New EnglandandBuffalo . The defense succeeded in chok- ing oU the passing of Baltimore quarterback Bert Jones. who bad stung Miami with four touchdowns when the Colla rout· ed the Dolphins •$.28 in October. Jones wound up completing 18 of 34 pasaes for 189 yards while Griese hit ta of 22for170 yards. And when 1ones was able to move tbe Colts near the line ln the third period, Baltimore was deprived ot a acore by a fumble . The Colli, trailing 10-6, had driven to the Dolphins .C on passes by Jones ot 9, lO and 12 yards to running back Lydell Mitchell and another 11 to Don McCauley. But as Colts back Roosevelt Leaks bulled toward the goal line, be was bit by Miami linebacker 8ob Matheson at the 1 and fumbled. Dolphins cornerback: Norris Thomas recovered in the end zone to sune tbt scoring threat. Yepremian 's first quarter field goal was set up when Nat Moore put Miami in position with a div- ing catch of Griese's 41·yard pass at the 11. ••lllm«• Mleml Mle-FGYernm!.,,27 8el-FGl.lnl\ert>2 8el-FGU~tl ' 0 0 o-' 3101-11 Mle -TlllMM 15 -s Iron\ GrleM CYeprlmlM 111<111 Ml•-L. HerrllnrlMI (VtPfMtlMllkJI I ,.._.,,m Cltlb Del•• First Oowm 17 11 lll"l'H·Y•rcll J>.122 Jl-207 PHlllll Y-1n HS llelllfn yentl J' 56 PHMS 1•~ 1~~1 PUllb 1-42 4'l1 l'umblts IOI* >J ._, P9n11u.ve.-os s.as i-1s INOIVIOUAL L8AD81tt ltUSHING -••111mor1. Mll< ... 11 ,... .... Mc~ley S.1C. II.'-"'°"· Mleml I.. Herrls 11-1«1, Oevls1M6. P ... SSING -8el1Cmore, .. _ lt•M-0, '"· Ml1ml,<iri..1S.2M, 170. llECEIVINO -.. lllmore, Mllclletl 6-•t. McC.-lt'f "51, CMr t..a. MIMnl, N, Moor1 HJ. i LOS ANGELES (AP) -He's po Pollyanna, but Bob Boyd can find a silver lining in what his Southern Callfornia basketball team baa to do after being thrashed ln their last two games. Is It Just Another .Game? "When you are beaten de· clalvely, it's an opportunity to see other players who may earn atartin& berths,'' Boyd said Mon· I day, • The Trojans began their season impressively with four new starters, beating Idaho State and Texu at bome. But then Southern Calilornia was pounded 82-$9 at Illinois and 93-67 at Utah. "We baveo't had the k1nd of pJaymaklng and settling in· Ouence out of the guards that we nedd,"Boydsald. Tb• Trojans may have new backcourt starters when they play home games a1ain1t. high· •corlag Hew Mexico Friday night anct. :PUlre on Saturday night. New Mbioo, +o, ha9'-faUed to make 120 pointl or more in only one tame so far. Tbelr rellultl In- clude a 12s-10t victory over Ken- tucky Stafe Mtbtay night. Duke, 3-1, bu 1.-t only to the natiOQ'a qcond Hnk9d ttapt. North ChoUna. • , ' "We coald tbrt ~wo.new cuU'dl," SOid 1ild, but be added tbat be dobll't •alto overreact. ff• J9 "1&bbold.lnc b1I dectaloa """' ill aft4li Trojan praCUou Ulii "' weet. r ... "'""'•' ............ ~ ;f ,, .. bman center. -Ollff • JlOMDton Jua &be 'froJane in 1cortaa wtu.ua per ijam•. ~ .ill .............. ~~ t.2 '*' ... Kareem Sh~uld Try to Embarrau BeDBOn-West INGLEWOOD CAP) -"Just another game," coach Don Nelson said when asked about Milwaukee's 23rd Na- tional Basketball Asaoclatlon contest of the season -which matches Bucks' rookie center Kent Benson and the Los Angeles Lakers' Kareem Ab- dul·J abbartonljbt. Game 1 on Oct. 18 at Milwaukee wu just another 1ame too unUl the second minute. Then an incident oc- curred that hu shaken the Lakera season, and may af- fect the leque champlomblp playo!ts thtee montbt from now. Film• of tbe lncldent showed that Abdul-Jabbar, voted tbe league'• most valuable player the past three 1eaaona, was elbowed lD the stomach by the 6-11 Benson. Alter he doubled over. the 1·2 · Abdul·Jabbar rose and de- livered a cra.shln1 punch to Benson's bead. Benson was fioored, suffer· inc a concuasion, and be needed sUtches for a cut near the eye. He dldn 't return to acUon until tbe Bucks' third iame of tho sea.son. Abdul· J abbar wu ejected by the ref· ereea. But be al.a() broke a bone ln bis right band aa a re- • suit of tbe blow, mlaalq tho next 20 Laker cames. The league a1ao levied a record fine a1atnat Abdul·Jabbar, $5,000. • Wb~ tM Lllen u a teeni c-.o .ovet"COm• the incl· dent ii a veey nal qtMIUon. Durlnt Abdul-Jabbar'• absence,. U>e team which had the beat regular season rec· ord tn the NBA last year struggled to an a.ta mark. One more loss waa added when Abdul·Jabbar finally ret\ll'Jled to acUon Sunday night ln a 111-109 defeat to Denver. Even lf Los Angeles doa tbe expected and recovers, making the playoffs. the Laters probably won't qualify tor a home court ad- vantage In one or more of the playoff serlea unless they have a phenomenal record the restotthe way. "If I were Kareem, I'd try to embarrass Ben1onf" Lat.us coach Jerry West 1aJd of the basketball upecta of the duel between lh.e players. .. There'• no way this 1ame meanathesametohlm as any other," West safd of b.Us star player's attitude. Altbot.Wh Abdul·Jabbar had 21 polnu and lf reboundl in his first game back, he may bave ~ tiotbered by a ham- burier·1\zed bandat• pro· tectln1 Ute back of bls ri1bt band, \tbieh ts still healin,. two-year· C()fttfact. The 31·7tar- old 1tole 41 buet and batted .38' ln addftton to1Ua 37 hoioera. mlnora durin• the '77 se11on, tiUt Ant•ls uout Frank Lane w sald Knapp la the key to tho deal. ·Frott, who wu a basketball star at Lon& Beach Mltllkan HlSh and Lona Btach City CoUece prior to aueDclloa Stanford, was 9·5 at Iowa aDd 1·1 at Cbicaao. Downl~ bad a .2'87 car .. r batting averaie before 1977 when Knapp had a 12·7 record with a . he batted .28' with 4 homers Md 4.80 e.r.a. He was sent to the 25rblin69games. Bosley batted .2S1f in a sames after btlnl reealled from Salt Lake City and Dotson, who wu 4·5 at Idaho Falls ln hla first pro campaisn, •lsned for a atsable bonus a!tet' belni the An&els' No. 1 draft pick. MIAMI'$ GARY DAVIS RUNS FOA 810 YARDAGE~ T.oo Expenslve .. Diablos Kill (.)ut . ., F O(!tball Program LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jllainf cosla have forced an end to ln- tercolleglate fobtbllll at Los Angel ea St.ate, whlch wlll concen- trate on other sports. A thlelic director John Hermann safd ~onday the ex- penses of insurance, plus overall in!latjon, have caused the school to drop football after 26 years. "I am saddened that we have to lose football," be said, "However, lhls will enable QI to maintain and empbulse Ut• suc· ceases of oar other sports ... The football coach tor the past two years, Ron Hull, bu tenure u a physical educaUou hdtruc- tor and wilt stay at Cal State. Ills 1976 team bad a S.S-1 record. ud this year's team was 4.5, Asalstant coach Walt Thurmond may lta)' on at the school in Pother c•p•elty, but asaistant.s Dan PeterSon ud Bob Holen beck are etpecWd to leave. All players with: eUgibllltf re- maining may tranafer to other ln- atitutlons. and be eligible lm- medlately. Hermann. a <JQe·llme football pl'l)'er, aald tlu\t last year wu the flnest ov~ fot atbleUcs lo the 30.year ,history or the uni· veralty. Tht Dia~ went to Ule in· tercoUegtate baseball World .Serles at Omaha, competlaf a1aln1t the major 1cboola ant woo Callfornla Collegial~ Athletic Alsociatlon titles '' track and golf. ••we're not UCLA or Soutben CaJilomla lo lootball, but we•rt pretty tood ln other sports," ~ athletic director said. ; The big era in Los Ange.Id State football was from 1983-65 under coach Homer Beatty. Ont of tbe stars of those teams wu defen1tve llneman Walter Johnson. wbo went on to pl1.7 for the Cleveland Browns. u J; In 196C, tbe DJ•bloe ••re ~ and the foll<nlrln8 year were,..: after 106ln& ~opener to BoW in&Gr-.n. / . \ t , ft DAILY PtlOf ·Grimsley Sigm I Pact With Expos liPNOLULU -The Montreal Expos aiped fr .. aeeni pUcber Roq Grlmlley to a six-year COD· trac;t Monday al the baseball me~tinga. The pact'• value 1.J esU'1\at.ed ln excea of .$1 milllon, incl~dlng a signing boom. ~ot.real ceneral m•na1er Cb ley Fox said that player ag t Jerry Kapsteln accepted the 'Expos' olfer in a telephone call to the club at the major league winter meetings here. Grimsley won 14 eames, lost 10 and posted a 3.96 earned run average for the Baltimore Orioles lut season aa be played out tbe option year of bla contract and became a free aeent eligible for the re-entry draft. lr4daBreeze . SOUTHBEND -Notre Dame, styrnied by Lalayette's zone de· fen•e much of the game, broke 100,e for 19 stral&hl points mid w* through the second half and ro Duck Williams' 22 polnt.s to a 7 ·42 college basketball victory Mooday night. It was the fourth straight vie· torf for the third ranked Irish and IL marked the fewest points scored against a Notre Dame team since a 51·35 victory (>Ver Marquette in the last game of the 1959 season. I Lafayette, trailing by nine at the half, pulled to within three poit,lts, 35-32, with 13:53 lert in the garpe. But that's when the big lrifh s urge started and six mhlutes later Notre Dame's ad· vantage was S4·32. The Irish were never threatened after that. T~nbFl•ab JO HANNES BURG. South Af"ca -Guillermo Vilas beat Stal Smith 6-2, 6-4 to qualify to fact ~usler Mottram In the finals or tile South African Open tennis chrttnpionshlp. N ottram defeated Frew Mclrt illan, 6-2, 1·6, 8-6 in the other semifinal. W JR sald R()8el'I and MSU athletJc dlnctbr J011eph Kearney would met\ with Cal athletic director Dave Nauard, but that Rosen wu not likely to take the job U lt were offered. Roaen wu reported ln Grand Rapid• and not available for comment. Kearney wu involved in Big Ten meetinas In Chicago and Maggard was en route to Cbicaeo. Other candidates for the Cal job Include Paul Wi1gin, former Stanford star recenUy fired u coach of the Kansas City Chiefs; and Bill BatUe, former Ten- nessee coach. s.At• t• Retire ST. LOUIS -Jackie Smith, who bas cauitJt more puses than any other tight end in National Football League history, will wrap up hi.I 15-seuon St. Louis Cardinals career after two more games. ''It would be lml)Oaslble for me to recount everythin1," the 37· year-old Smith said Monday in announcing his reUrement. "I don 't know lf I'm goln1 out on top, but I believe this team iB go- ing to be on top," he added, tearfully. The 6-4 Smith, a form er Northwest Louisiana track star, was St. Louis' lOlh·round draft choice ln 1963. He snared 56 puses for a team· 1 record 1,205 yards in 1967 and af. ·terward played in five straight Pro Bowls during a strlne of 121 consecutive games which was ln· terrupted by a knee injury in 1971. Olfptpfc Sit~•~ Claremont Men's College and Pierce College in the San Fernando Valley have reportedly offered free land for construction of a permanent velodrome for the 1984 Summer Olympic Games. The Claremont offer also in· eludes 4,000 dormitory spaces for use as an Olympic village. JEFF FRAZER (32) BLOCKS A LAGUNA A TT!MPT. Jlm Rlchardeon (44) la Dominated by t-7 HVC Star. BASKETBALL I MISCELLANY Canyon ~lassie Edison Stumbles In Einal Second 91 ANIE CASTILLO Of•DlllY ......... Scott F~ ol Cuyos.fflab (An•bliro ~ Hn.k • Pl'HIUr•· paek•d free tbrow with one aecond nmalnin.1 to lHd the Comaacbea to a 6'·$3 victory over Ed1loG <Huntlbstc>Q Beach) Rllll ill the cba~onahlp came ot tbe Canyon basketball clUllc Mond•1nlaht. FerfUIOQ 1et up the 1ltqatJon when he lllpped •way an errant Charaers pau wttb fit• •~di left, scooped lt U1> and r•ced downcourt before be wu fouled in the key. He mlaaed the flnt ot two atteoipta on tht intentional tnfractJoo. It WU tbe 8eCOQd tJ.me In U many ftU'I that Can.yon baa won Ill own tournament bu\ the Cornucbee can't bo accuaed of stacklnl the deck. The)' 15 by 19 polnta mid way t.btou tbo thlrd J*iod before moun a comeback th•t HW ttiow:n oQi;. score Edlaon 28-8 ln tM f1IW U mlnutee. The Cbaraera, meanwhile, helped do themaelvea Ln. Edlson failed to cooned on a field 1oa1 in the lut quarter, durf111' which they also man•1ed to miss live free throws and commit four turnovers. Edlaon bad ulled Ume out with •a aeconda remainins and in po11e11lon of the ball. The Chari en whltUed the doek down to 13 aecooda before caWn1 time ag•ln to let up one last play. But Ferguson upset the plans when be PNUured the Cbar1ers ball bandier to set up his game- winning heroics. The Cbargets never 1ot a chance to tick off the1 final second. Aft.er offioiala c1eared the floor of Canyon fans, u Edison player made • de· rogatory statement to a referee. After first calling a two-shot tec)lnical foul, the official waved the game over. Canyon would have bad poaaeulqa followtn1 the t.ecbnica.l 1bota. Jett Tutton. a 6-5 eealor senior, paced the Cbar1era with 21 polJlts. He aat out nearly tb• en· tlre fourth quarter as EdiSOCl went to 1*-delay same early, Tutton bad been brllllaot ill the middle two perloda. He blad etaht po111t. 1n the flnt four mt.nut• of the •ICU>d period and scored the Cbuaen' flrlt toar neld loala IA tho t.hh'datana. EdliOO acored Just one Otld soal after that. . ..... .,. .... ,. .. • ... c::... O.vtt"' J a • • ,. ' '"'*' • s 2 21 -• 'rwclttlMr'IO , 2 I WllMIW GMrlty t t S 4 .,,..,, .. M<CMH't • t J ,, ""*' K-.Ntl Ol = AllM I l 0 t Tllllii.fl Gull• 001• ~ ~ tl1 7 ,.....,.... TMalt II JI " ~ Tttalt ... ..,...,..,.. ,. ",. " ' • t 1 .. ' ' • , J" ... " • 4 • 4, , o a ~ ' • 0 • •• 4" t I t I '71tDM Uton t-.a " IJ ,. ....... Freeman leads NH Quintet , By a Dally Pilot Wrt&er Defense gave Newport Harbor Hitb the conaol•Uon UUe at the C•nyon buketball tourn11Deot Monday. Al1owln1 Unlveralty Hlth (Irvine) Just seven points tn the fourth quarter, the Sailors posted a SS.50 victory to up their seaaon record to 2-1. Brian Freeman was lbe main cat•lyst behind the Tan• fourth quarter 1ur1e that wrapped it up. The junior cuard scored 10 ol his 14 points in a five tninut.e span to turn a Me-point lead into a 14-43 cushion. University didn't score a field goal in the fourth quarter unW there wu juat 1:0. left. Then, lt was a1alnat Newport Harbor te- serves. NetHlda 1t111s LAS VEGAS -Senior forward Jackie Robinson bad 25 points and four other Nevada·Las Vegas starters were ln double figures in a 117·90 colleee basket· ball victory over Pepperdine Monday night. I ..aguna Outlasts llVC Five, 51-44 A press which for-ced tho 'fro. jan1 into numeroua turnovers wu the Newport Irey. Freeman and Pat Baker were in total 000· trot of the front court altu•Uotl while Brian Karavicb dld u out- standing job in 1topplnl Unl'a Roger Poirier. Maravtcb a1lo wound up •the g•me'1 top scorer with 22 polnta. Poirier had 16. UnJ~ty led only t1"ce. 1-T early in the •ame and 41-40 wtth 2:57 left in the thlrd frame. But from then on, lt was all Newport. whlch acored 25 of the next 30 polnll. Nevada-Las Vegas, the loth· ranked college team in the nation and 4-0 th.ti aeuon, won its 62nd consecutive home game. The Rebels broke the game open ear· ly with a 14·6 scoring spurt. Cal Candidates Darryl Rogers, football coach al Michigan State, was lo meet with University of California of- ficials in Chicaeo today to talk about the vacant coachin& Job at the Pacific 8 school, a Detroit radio st<ttlon reported. Laguna Beach made it to the second round of lts own Christmas buketb•ll tourna· ment Monday, stopping Hunt· ington Valley Christian of Newport Beach, 51·44 in the Laguna gym. A smothering zone press by Laguna did the job, en.blinl the Artists lo outscore Huntington Valley Christian 18·2 In one stretch and nearly put it on ice before the first half was over. Coach Mlke Roche rushed out his second team a httle too early and Huntington Valley CbrisUan Cal High's Height . Too Much, 71-55 Mission Viejo absorbed a sound beating at the hand• of Cal Hi'h (WbftUer), n.ss, Monday ln an openlnC round 'am• of the Laguna Beach Cbrlatmaa basket· ball tournament. Cal Hlah used the lnt1midaUn1 presence of&-10 cent.er Lee SmJth and the husWn1 play of 1uard Norman Edwards to sune the Dlablos. Mission Viejo movea lnto the consolation quarterfinals with a 3 p. m . game Wednesday a1ainst Weatern High of Anaheim. Callfomia will play Loyola Hllh Tritons, DH Play Tonight Danaltllls Hllh'a Dolphlnl aQd tho San Clemente Tritons l'et\ln\ to basketball action tonilbt £n tournament actton wtth the Dolphins on the road at Gardea Grove IDgh and the Trttou play- ing vJ11Unc Pacltlc• (Garden GrovelllO). D•H Jlllla tak• ltl 2.0 record to the Garden Grove !Aap tourney -.MN OleMol'a ~fb · awaltl ID the ftnt focu.4 of ~ ~t·team~. l>aclal Dua BWI are De s.~uela au anrq•> ao4 IKU leam (U.5). • Ai San Clemente mu Trltont ot coacb atCh wW be li;'tnl to mlkt It two n. ti.r,:;w~~Caple~ JollD Caram bu aeOHil ie Po)Jatl ID ueb al lu Cl..a•i.'t .hfo ata;r¥. of Los Anae.lea Wedne9day at 9 p.m. All games are at. La1una BeacbHlgh. Edwarda poured lD 20 points for California and directed blJ of. fenae lite an emot.looal paint.er working to aet his creation juat right -barking cllrecUOoa, posi· Uoning players, 1t.eann. pasaes and abooUna with ~recisfon. Smith was leu of a factor 1n the rout, despite bla &-10 height. But even with a pualve style of play, he scored 14. Althouab overmatcbed ln bei1bt, Ml.salon VleJo tried to score inlJdo at the beal.DDin.-, and Mike BoatM did a cNdltable Job, neU11uc 1e point.a, but Calltomia wu better at that came, and sorted to • a.12 lead after one quarter. It fot proaressively wone for tho Dlabloe. Mt11ion Viejo fell behind by 15 polnte at the h•lf and by tbe fourth quart.er the Dlabloa were burled under a 25-polnt deficit. Smttb aot into foul trouble early, 11Lckin1.up bll thlrd tntrac-- tlol) bf the lecGDd quan.t\ but be ,emalnect oo the court and never iot .notbet foul. MJuton VleJo blt two partlcuWiY co14 apelll wlt&ch enabtecu:alllorma to •= th• ftnt In tbe atanaa~ornlaoatl tbe 'J)labloe 1M1 ill OD6 ttrtteb; Tb• other cam• ln the' 'Ulli'd Hrlod. a lN Qtarr)', aDd WMll tallfontla cooltd itt lt t.S b; 17 point.a. closed the gap to seven points with 3: 08 remaining in the game The startlne unit returned to restore order. and the Artists controled the ball for m06t of the la.st two minutes. In Huntington Valley Chris· Uan 's atftak it scored 11 atraighl points, taking advanta1e ot La1una's sloppy passing to make it close. In fact. the entire game wu marked by sloppy play at both encta or the court, and althotW\ only 16 fouls were called in the game, each team spent a con· siderable amount of time on Uie floor, either dlvlng for loose balls or trying to steal errant pa11ea. When La1una went on lts 18-2 binge lt trailed 7-S, and when the dust bad cleared the Artilt.s were sitting atop• 25-11 lead . Huntlniton Valley Cbrlatlan had difficulty woritln1 the ball lo· aide to lta 6-7 center, Jeff Frazer. and Laguna Beach did a good Job acreenlng Frazer out. lo~ r• bounds. Frazer flniabed with 16 polnts, tops for the Minutemen, while, Laguna Beach wu led by .nm Rlcbardlon '118-polnt total. Laguna increased Its adffb· ta1e to aa much as 18 point. in t.b9 third quarter before the starton lelt and HunUngton Valley Cbria- tlan made lta final spurt. By wlnning. Lasuiia quauna to meet Estancia High of Colla Mesa in the qu~rfinala ThW'l<- day at 7:30p.m. .... -···:.,~ KlllCI T :':: It-., 2 0. lt9f"Olcl• 2 • 1 4 H-0 0 I t ,.,.,,,, ' 4 t " ~ 2 0. 4 .,,~ .... HIUllll• 'f ": ": ~ lmtlh I t • C.ldl ......... --~. t ,,. Pitt!-1011 NICholt I 0 I 4 Lipton I 0 0 ~ O.llMY , 0 • t w.ca.1 2 •• 4 ~ 0, 0 1 l'et•lt '' 11 4 U T•tela 2S S 1J JI k_..,..,_... HltV•llWOirlltl-. ' 10 ll ,,_ ~........ ,, .. " .,, .................... ~ HVO'S IUCK fU!YNOLD8 (22t CALEB HEISE (23) OINNU.' 11n C.kterwood (With bait Look• for Dave Nichol• hb J)agles Cage.., 1.'7in, 58·55 I Freeman, held to juat one field goal in the ftrat half, acored on a couple of fut break.a to belp the Sallon regain the lead. He start- ed off the final period with • drlv· ing book •bot. a abort jumper and • breabn.y lay.up foUowlng • steal. All UnlvenJty bad to abow tot its fourth quarter output 'ftl'e three free throws by Poirier untll Ru11 Stoboff broke the ice with a short jumper nearly aeveo mlnutea into the period. The only thin& ne1ative about the Tara• performance came at the free throw llne where they were 1! of 33. WI"'""' Clll ............. ....... ....... .. .... . ....... .-......... ,,,, ~ .,,.~ .,,, ~ 4 t ' tt ...,t¥tdl • ' • 2l ..... ..-., ... . ····~...-... .. ......... 444tl ~ •••• 5'1Wt ., •• --~ ttlt...,..._ Ottl ..,__ ••••ow-· •• ,. oi.mprt-• • • • ~..-... 0 • 1 • T.Ule ti 1t 12 • T-*•1• ts U • " ICW9..,.....,. Uftl¥Wlttr 11 11 1J 7_. Ht_,...t HM11ot lJ IS tJ 11-61 , , Kl1 T .... ;.:..L / 1 ...... v-... ~ f . ouers, Sea untlnstoo Beach Hl1b •1 &QC! Owl Corona dtl llar ab Sea Kinll .,.. lo act1oa toDitbt at Weatmintter Hiit. where lbe 13th Weatmia1ltr· llartna Jnvtt.aUon&l ba1ketball &ournam«tt t. 1cbeduled. In tonltht'a opener at 6:30 are lb• Oilers of coach Roy MUler, ho tanele with lona·Ume cage power Compton, a team which bU senerally started 1low and 1atned morneatum u the aeuon pro1reued. Coroftl dtl Mar, beat.en twice · in aa mw 1t.al'U, bu taken Sunstt. ~ powen Mar1aa <Hunllnn>o Beach) and Foun· lain Va.OCJ lnt.o ovenlme betON IUCCUl'Qblftl. Founl•ln VaJley wa1 ex~ into lou.r overtime& before Coroaa del Mar, whlcb la •till wltbout atart•ra Steve EaPoftto• Mvk DI. kilt. ·a ·untln1ton B•acb '• bit 1WHJM>rll tn. 1-1 IHIOD to dati are Tom Peltoleai (16.0 averace> and Curt Steinhaus (J5,0 ). wbile Corona del Mar'• Dave Koehler ancl .Jim Hltcbcock eacb aver..-11.0 JMlll9tl .,.. ltaue. State Tourney Enlarged JC Cagers Will Pfuy at long BetrehArelia J'untor collece bas ketball coaches have been fi1htin1 for a D.aJber of years to 1et the state tdarnament expanded-and UH!y On ally got their wlsb recently. Tbe large acliools tourney will ~ enlarged from el1ht to 16 btrth1-meanin1 second place team1 from each conference will participate. And the four small ~Dferencea have also added eteC>Dd place teams. Thu., wbea the atate tourney ls held in mid·Marcb at tbe Long Beach Arena a total of 24 JCs will N. involved-which means the Qent will be expL"ded from three to four days. In most cases, the conference wlnner will advance to the tourney with a playoff involving ~e second through fifth place ••ms decidlna the other ~reseotative. · Tbe 1lte change (from Fresno Long Beach) came about marily because: (1) poor di and (2) most of the team.a Cerrlt.oe t.ad lts wont aeuon ever in "171 compllln1 a 2-8 re· cord. Jolnson, a bl&hly· succeaafW ll&h school coach at El Ranche> '1\d Newport Harbor, · has a 26-31-5 record alter seven year• atCen1t.os. He was 117·36-5 as a prep coach. ' -CRAIG SHEFF An &Mowicement could come Wednesday night at Cerritos' awards banquet. Munwhile, Blackstone says he's going to quit, but be doean 't. know when. CIF Grid Sites at •ot to the aemifinala were Southern California. Also, e sponsor of the tourney k.lat) ls located near Long acb. o,,....."* ,,..., ....... ...... ~.111 .... St. 'M UM) w LOI Alla 11\.11 et ANllelnl MedluM,L CM.-.~1111 .... Two JC football coachea <BW 5i:;~~::t' w 1,,.a Mimun et.•11 •t vtter- ' ol • ... Harbor and Ho ... --' ..... , .. ..,.,,. ~· ll'IMI• ..,_ .. an1 1.0<n-117~) w Alttef ... Veller llMI et Atl-k ol Sota Aaa) bave l'e· ltloe>eVt1MVJ111'lorC.00419t,L eel uad more are expected in •--OMf-'IMh ext few weeJts. Ttm'lt Ott !WI,,_ I..,.,_., l!eo21 et C.emtoe c.o.1eoe.1:ao <-* .. ~.~ ..... Ernie Johnson's situation at Nonwalk m.0.11,,. Hett m.o.n •t ..... MlrMe ....__. StedlVM, 1::11). \,.anatos l.s sWl Up in the Ur, D-............ ~." .... wule Marty Blackat.one (Rio c:ir:::.'*· (IMI ... ....,. o.m. (IUwnlOtl D>ado > buo't made up hLs mlDcl. ...,..., .. ._ , "Ernie will come up tor re-...,.1111 "~.,.. .. ;iew," says Cerritos board pnsl· ~,!."' ""0 w o.n.M.' ia.m. at ANNtm dent Lou Banas. "We're •01 .... to .....,._Qtllf••-ll'IMtt e aue LOs A,...._ Of.0 ,,. VIia. ,_,.. Ct-al IC ~ea loac look at the 1ituaUon." AMlletl'lt....._,a. I ~ .eve Triumphs, 6~7 I :Monty Livingstoq led the entire ganui and ieoNd 10 of h1I 1am.. bad what lacked I Uke' a bllb 22 pointa 1n tbe aafe cuahlon, IT A at fourth quarter as baUUme. ' flt.rano Valley Cb.rla-' But Ubert.y~tlU. held ott a late rally bebtnd o~ .... t. Liberty Cbrl1Uan pulled tO~tbln three (BuUn,ioa Beach) to ~ti late lD Ule came •t a N.sT noa·leaiue 1 T l 1 )Juketball victory Mon· e ore ... v ~1ton daJ Dllbt on the wtnn~· reaBc:.1=.-:1.;;-b.d 15 .court. POIDtl tor tbt wifoen The victorious Ea&lea kV~ Captsttano•1 fut break. Goodnight flnt1bed -witb 20 polota for the Mlltutemen. Ctlf•l,... YMf~ ~-64, UWfrair-..p LIWtY OWtttl-.Arll« , .. ~ """' "· a....,. .. """ 7, ....... I. lkl"!tlillw ,,.._.._._ ~ c.,o Velley (11; ....... I •r I, llowefl t, U¥\nlt..,. ... WI 1$, .... _.,Of\1911 .. .--4 Helfl""4J1 C.,0Ve~Qlr . .lt1.t£ 2 quarts: s 1h gallon: · 1 ~ I um1ted ttme only. You save $2. 75 .. QUOTABLE QUOTES: From Hal Sberj)eek, Fullerton Colleae football coach: "In 25 years of coaching, loalns the Avocado Bowl this year wu my biggest dlsappolntment .... · they (Golden West) capitalized on our mistakes and played &ood. hard football. Tbey were well prepared." From Bay SUekJeford, Golden West football coach: ''It'a nJce to have been coasidered f~ the Jr. Rose Bowl. 1 believe the JRB selection committee made the onJy declaton they could make. Pasadena bad a better record (than GWC), they were n,pked ahead ofua all HUOQ, they won a very tough conference and they won their bowl game. lt would have been bard to pass them up~· SKIPPIN' AROUND : Davey Lopes, the Dodgers' second baseman, viewed the recent Golden West.-8anta Monica foot· ball came. Lopes' brother, Patrick, wa1 a freshman linebacker for the Cotsaf.ra. He's 6-0, 230 pounds. • .a.e.e Roak, a re1erve for OCC'I basketball team, pitched a couple of seasons 1n the Sao Diego Padres• or· sanizaUoo. •. VC lniae netted 11,500 from it.I recent celebrity 1olf tourney. FollertoD, GWCCJash· Golden West College blds to even ita record at .500 tonight (7:30) when the .Rustlers tfek to .Fullerton Colleae 1n JC basketball play. .Both teams have dropped their last two games. Golden West en· ters with a 2·3 record while Fullerton Is 2·4. Sophomore Todd Zirbel aparks the Rustlers with a 19.0 scor· tng average while Will Fletcher is the only other G WC player hitting in double fi,ures (10.8). The Hornets are led by sopbomorea Jay Lucas (8·3 > and Mark Pepper ( 6·6) and fresbm an HarTy Heineken (8-3). Basketball ~· Ll'lt.._, .. ,Oc.-\'Nwlt 122 122 1n '" '" "' 122 122 tit "' "' 122 '" 121 '" '" lit 122 tit, IU ll2 <>uen View -fllltMll , .. l!llCllcott U, Pltlmlll 14 flette<wn 4. Wit'°" 2. nUMMAN ()( .... view•. e.., ..... ur Ckelll View -l.eMlll'lecl 14, SfNtl ti, l'ucslltr I, Yeul S, llMK •, Ot~,_, .. sea.it .. OllTtttCf flaUMMAN ~~-.oc..vw• ~VW#-~leftlO,U.. to, a.ter.t,~t. Metllewl t. DAILY PILOT •3 san juan hills country club . ~ OPEN TO PUBLIC Reasonable Rates . . 18 Holes • PAR 71 • .Excellent Greens ;;:·~Jdtl FOil MIM le LADIES ·• Set Woods ' Irons • 20 to 50% Off . •Slacks, Shirts • 30% lff· Skirts, Shells • Golf Shoes . • 25% •Juniors Clulis •Plus Y2 Price Table SINIOR CITIZEN SPECIALS! .. ..., l T_,.11 IWl lw/Cartl S6SO--,..,_ WIBDAY~t. ,,...,. ................... ~ lltWte•.,.... .... l•.v1CwtJ" SAT.• SUM SftCIAL PM IATIS •••••••••• Phone 493-1167•137.0361 s. ..... c " ......... , .. Jd --... ..... \AT YOUR FORD OR LINCOLN-UERCURY DEALERS t .. " . •:J • I ''«' t i/ .. ... . -.... ,me-. ...,. a ~Oll9 ,....,. .. , .. ,..,.. dlld ...... •tlw'*I .... ........... MM lft a OOlnL • Jn ~~,...,.. Oeftlllftedleclby•I• tow llr•in•n'• wet•t ~ • lilO'Jll • •" "Comp My 01 ~ (1tlt) V• JGM- eon. "-w MllNnd. A P9Y' dioplllNc dlr•Oftl:W • woe ctty. () tirt.) • 'nta t#D'f IUNOH M_. not oNf 9* \rou. ble • llome, ~ lllo with ,_ ~ wfW'I IN 0-C-•Job M M Im -perlor. • ,... "°°9(lEI A young 9lrllrl•nd ol W..'1, upon dlecovering • 119edi9bet•, ~ l*'rill9d. • THEACMOF Calling a Truce? UNCERf AINTY "09moc:fecy, l..Mdenllllp And Commitment .. A c;on. 9lder8tlon of tM oper.uon ot d1moor•oy lrom Gllbntth'• '*'°"" mem-on of IMdlra. Longtime adversaries Hawkeye (Alan Alda) and Hot Lips <Loretta Swit) are thrown together on a special mission in the first of a two-part episode on MASH, tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. CD M MAH l!HA\IU ··~~·· u,l:n..W#a **'ii "a.doe Or Th9 Croee" (1971) Georg• t<wliedy, Rlcatdo Mont• bM. The murder of Illa...,. dm... • d9tec11ve Into I rellgloua ores.. ( 1 hr., 30 min.) ... MYTHMl!~S When Ernie ..ida • tllwMI you note for the Statue or Uberty, tn. F~ ooY· 9rnrnent lrwt1• CM ~ IU twnlly to 111111 WMhlng. ton,O.C. fiD OAOWIHO YEAAS ·"TM Child'• PerlOfMl!lty" (I) C:UHIWS ({I MEAVORIFFIN G~ Aldi Little, Doug Kereti.w. Jo• F111zl1r, DIYld s.ytl, KrMkln. Bar· I>«• FllW\lld. 7:00 G HBC HEWS "UAA8CW8 D ABCNeWI J 18 I LOV£ LUCY f ··Lucy Wrftel A Pley" ' .., ADAM-11 I Otlle« Miiioy '9turn1 to ~lrol duty Ind ditcovwl llllt Offloer ... .. QOl1o< llld«lnO tlklnf • dMk Job. • MACNEIL I LEHRER MPOflT D EAATH, SEA ANO MY "Remo!• Senllng" (I) TO TEll THE TRUTH 7:211 fD PLEDGE BREAK Aegullr1y eon.duled pro- grwnmlng mey be deleyed due to p!edge brNkl. 1:ao I CAHOIO CAMERA NEWLYWED GAME 9 HOU.YWOOO IOUANI ... THf8RADY~ COmplicatlon• .... when thl Bflldy kid• get their mothlr to proteet 9Q11t11t city 111111 to .. ..,. 1 J*11 alt• ,_ their horM.. • LET'S MAKE A OE.Al. • L.A. INTEACHAHOE "lnelde Straight" ti~IHOW llOO 8 (I) THC FTTZPATNQ(I "Say Goodbye To Buddy 9onk1r1 .. The FllJ:p1trlcb IMI unMay end ere unture Chan11el Listings 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles 8 KTlA (Ind.) Los Angeles G KABC-TV (ABO) Los Angeles (I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 9 KCST (NBC) San Diego I KTTV(lnd.) Los Angeles KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles • KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles G> kOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach of how to rMCt when 9Mtl btlng9 • ..nool buddy, wtio hM tulflrtld • ner- YOUI br.iidown, ~ lor theWMk9nd. G MAH PROM ATLAHTII ··rn. Hllltld Mont9g1141" An Ulld«w9tlf' ~ tr199 Merk Hanle In tM put, wMr• n. b9oof'llM 1n11ngttld In 1M leud .,.....,.. thl femlli.. of Romeo end Juliet. 0 MOVIE * * ''The Chrtst/1\19 TrM" ( 1Hll) Wi11M1 HoldM, lllr· n• Liii. A -'Illy bUlf.. nH•m•n d•votH 1111 entlf• ~ to the ~of Illa d)1l'tg IOfl. (2 hrl.) 8 9 HAPf'V DAVI "A9qulem For A Mlllc>h" Rllpl'I'• prtd9 ~ hl8 t«ror • 119 ~ t"9 boxJng me wttn • tootblll bruit« -the en.ctlonl of • Pfelty glr1. G JOKER'S WILD ... CAAOt.. BURHtm' ANO FflUIHOI GUMl9: John ltyner, Ken- neth Mera. II) MOVIE * * "Five Golden Oregon•" ( 1987) Robert Cumm4ngl. ~ Lee. An Amerlc9n pl9ytloy In Hong Kong b•ComH lnVOIYtld with .,, im.rn.. tlon11 1muggllng rlne oomprlllftg 1119 Ave Gold- '" Dregone. wtlCM 8Ctu91 ktentltle9 Mw ~. MCl'lt ttwougllout thllr yMf9 of i.;e ICll9 cr!IM. _, to -=ti otn.r. (2 111'1.) ID IN PEAFOMWa ··~T,_111'!1 .... 0fl''• More -fof "'-... ~ ,.,,, ....... Cf HI.. , .. •ntm•nt ........ ctllld end .... to tied! ... cMd tlOw to ........... WOftd. uteOLAYIMI&. IHIUY "lllfrley'• Oper11ton" When ...... ....., to the ....... -~ __,rgery,,, pancleraonklm .,,.... .,. .. Mr ..... meMlnt ffllndl """ to ,_ .... dr.-.d .. ~ ...,. trocn .. "N/11» in wond•rl1nd'' pt•r ........... '<\~ I COHOINTM1'°" A~ll "TM F'odlll: A Ctoee Aotd'' ,... Myenon ... • IWoer-n delllng wftlt "" ......... end &-*of...,...~ MOid by women .-"'* ~ .. erown llldooi-. I OYl1'~ 9:00 (I) M0A01°H ~end Hot UPI.,. gruc1g111g ocmpe11i0111 on 1 epeclu Nt1tnm.n1 10 lnOINr MASH UllM wN11. under ... ..,... of tf*"Y ftre. they 9"'*tlelOI • wondre>u9 phelliHMnon. (Pwt 1ol2) G MUU.IOAN'l l'TEW "Ah,~" A family ~ tttc> btOomee 4 ~ OtdMJ when Jimmy Ind 1119 coutln, AdMI, ~~In.,.. ~ 89 THME'I COMPNl'f ··Jld(e l.W:N" Aopra on 1M ,.,,,.,. '°' tM '*''· IO Jeolt'e *'tlnO ~ (Don PorW) gl¥.e him • c:heck. a MON1C1e AffW • ~ WOfMft drlVH h•r cir Into lrOMidl'I VM. the Cflilf i-r. 1tlllt IN ...,_.., not trom • ll9St att8dt llUt from en old bUll9t Ihm Nd moved -..10 IN MM. • MSWQNFFIN GU9lt1: Rlctt Utt.le. Doug K1r1h1w, Joe Fral•r. Dlvld 8eytt. 1<19ekln, Blr- ber• Fllrefllld. • MAITEAPl£Ce THaATAI . • I, C1M1Ue: Poleon le °'*"" LMe ~ ltllt Auguetul hU d~tld IW liWICtl9ry. Ifie IT\lk4l9 p19n1 io ltl>IJ ~ lrolll ~ to tn. ttwone. 9:10. AMAH POlJ< FaTIVM. e:aoe(I) OHIDAYATA TIMI "Bwber9'• Fr1end'' Batbl- • KCET. O 8:00 -In Performance at Wolf Trap. Benny Goodman and ms or- chestra perform Uie orl~ jan veraioo of Genbwto.'• ,.Rhapsody ln Blue" as a higbligbt of this illl·Goodman proaram. Also on KOCE, Channel 50, Jat 10. • ABC D 10:00 -Barbara Wilwa Special. Two ~ favorites, Lucille Bau and Heiµy '11\e Fonz" Winkler, are in· tervlewed in this segment. C~ fJ 11 :30 -"Houston, We've Got a Problem ... Three American astronauts encounter trouble ln space in this 1974 movie with Robert Culp, Clu Gulager and Gary Collins . t' 'Geographic' .Finds Freedri'!' By JERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES (AP) -After nine years on com .. rclal television, "The National Geo- Jraphic Special" has achieved a l'eedom on public television it bad never enjoyed before. "We bad a very good rela- tionship with CBS," said Dennis Kane, the Geographlc's ex· ·~~eJNNle .Comedian Rich Little plays .:a psychotic slayer on Police ·woman, tonight at 10 on NBC, Channel 4. ecutlve producer for the series. "However, as the case wodtd be with ilflY outside packager you have a bit of pressure. They make certain r ecommenda· lions." But the main problem when the show was on CBS, and on ABC ln its final year on commercial television, wu time. "THE NETWORKS renewed the specials on a year-to-year baa la, which gave us only etght to nine months to plan and fllm four specials a year," Kane said. ''That was not tbe best wsy to operate. We didn't have enough time to develop the special. You realJy need about two years with a dotumentary." Arter ABC canceled the series tbe National Geographic turned to public television and station WQEE in Pittsburg_b. Next, they wenttotheGul!Oilcorp. ·'Gull gave us an unprecedent· ed grant to do the series for three. years. We got Sl,3 million up front for each year -and lt waa hands off from bolh Gulf and the Public Broadcaatin1 Service," he said. THE GEOGRAPBIC'S first 1peclal for t)le year, "Yukon Passage," JJ sbowiD1 this week on public televlliin. !rbe first air· tn1 was l\f,ondayntabt. · Next up, in tbe aecond week ol January, wiU be "Tbe Legacy ol L.S.B. Leakey." Other shows tbi5 season will be "'Ttie Great Whales" 8J)d "The Livin1 Sands ofNamlb." The Geo1raphlc 's first spedal for PBS, "The Incredible Machine," on the human body. broke all viewtn1 records for public television. In fact, all of its shows laat year flnished ln the top four ln the ,.un,s for pubUc: television. Kane estimates that· on C~. and ABC the apeeiala drew an au· dlence ot 22 m!Woa to t3 million. On PBS, be estlma~s lt reaches 18 million Cq 20 mlUlon people over the course of two ot three airings within a week. . KANE SAID, .. In the be1~g tn the 1960s we were ver)> much into animals. No one bad done that before, but then other pre- d uc era be1an .doing animal sbow1. We're mainly into people stories now. We will .do animal stories, such aa the whales aqd the deaertofNamlb. "But. our animal stories are now about animals with a. prob- lem~ There's a iood chance the whale COUid become eztlnct. We 1ive peop)e a feell~J-~ about wbales, we get clou to ~in. bUt we show whit lt would mean if they do inilted become ex~t. The Namib •tory 11 about. animals you see now!Mre elae and bow they have adaptM to the d .. ertV1er m1Uioos of years.'' Shows ln the works are on eold and man's inv9lvement and faaclnedon wjth the ~etal; ~ 'bllmqmindefldJlsJ>OWe~: the 111t of th~ great steamshJPti Hong Kona: and the. problems facing the etepbant1 particularly ln Africa w,bere U may be<:ome ~tlnctbytbeaidoftbecentury. 'Fathert) Cas~ LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rober& Yowa1. Jane W11u, EUnor DoN.bue, Bllly Gray and Laaren Cbapln get toaether a1aln for another "Father Knows Best Reunion" on NBQ Dec. 18 ... Actress Nucy •alone has been named pro. ducer of "The Bionic Woman .. , .• Howard W. Koch wUl produce the SOth anniversary presenta· lion of the Academy Awarcb next April 3 ... latte Andrew1 wiU tape her 1pecla1 for CBS ln Lon- don t.h1I lllOatb ••. Dick Martla has completed the pilot of '"The Cheap SlioW" ln -.vhlcb he is bott ... ,,. Proctuc~IN. Gerber bas ac-ulred 1b8 ~ .. One of t.be laymond&'~ tor a three-part movie on CBS. 11• Bqra1 and 1aek Miiier will 'write the screenplay from lean &lkl9oft'1 book .•. -· ... RTAtNMENT I THEATER I HV GARDNER •i..nm .. elt &h Evans Let ~· .~ 'Getaway' " 1 Q: Who doe1 film producer Robert E'Yan1 bta•• for .\U MeGraw '• leawlD1 Wm for Uve lteGaieaf-F.P .• IAbbock, 'ha. •· A: HimaeU. Six month.a after mald.01 "Love tory" and "Godfather." Ev&n1 explalns, "I in,,lst- -ed All make 'The Getaway' when she didn't want to do lt ... I was Ill~ working 18 houn a day on "the God!ather,' and never had time to co down to Tena to 11ee her. She was alone wlth Steve tho whole time and It changed her life. It was a.11 my own fault." BACKGROUND: We first met Bobby Evans when he was • 1vAte1 in business with his brother Charles, In a clothing firm known as Evans-Picone. When Charles first learned his handsome young brother preferred chasing skirts to selling pants, he l',sued a friendly but firm ultimatum: Either tend to business or become an actor. Bobby stayed with the eompany and two years later sold the firm to Revlon for, as he put it lo Marvin Gross (editor of 1•Book Digest''}, "several million dollars." Gross predicts, along with a few of Bob's friends, that a decade from now they'll be makinl a movie about Jl,obert Evans. Meantime, Bob's marriage to TV personality Phyllis George ls said to be shaky; and Steve and AU have separated. The more lhini:s ~hanee ... · Q: I read tbaUbey'rf' ma.king a mov!e <science.' fiction, I trust!> called ••A Pregnant Man." Any Idea who the •ctor II who'll play the "fal.ber·lO· be"? -Mrs. Thomas Patterson, Omaha, Neb. A: Billy Crystal's been signed to play that role in the movie co-authored by Joan Rivers and Jay 'Glad You Asked That' by Marlfyn and Hy Gardner Redack. But it won't be called "A Pregnant Ma~." Avco Embassy is titling the comedy ''Rabbit Test." The cast reads like the dais in a Dean Martin TV roast: George Gobel (~o'll play the President of 1.he U.S.>. Fanny l''lagg (the First Lady), with C•male impersonator Charles Pierce playing the aueen of England. Roddy McDowall and Ronny Schell play double parts, each appearing in drag halt \.he time. Doing cameo roles will be Imogene Coca, Paul Lynde, Allee GhosUey and Murray Matheson. . Q : Wasn't Fred MacMurray once engaged to Marlene Dietrich? -R. f,., Lansing, Mich. ). . A: No . T~ey were only engaged in .making a j Crim an 1942, titled "The Lady Is Willing," not co-l star ring In an affair lo remember. Director Mitch ~ison recalls: "The beautiful but egotistical Miss i Dietrich wondered at the time why her co-star did not fall In love with her ." "Frankly, Marlen«:." the director says he told his star, "Fred's so much in l love with his wife, he couldn't care lesa about any ..other woman ... so you lay off!" .. Q: Any Idea which was the costliest Item tn the • 'budget. of the latest James Bond movie, tbe actors, r dJ.e wJikJ1. lbe Wrector. special effects -or what? , David Stein. Glendale. Cal. A : The costliest lteru lot "The Spy W)io Loved e" ran around three and a half million -fdr the ignin' and construction Of the world's lergest tage a~ Pinewood Studio• in London. Built )>eclally for the jnteriors of the supertanker which kidnaps" three nuclear submarines. Currently is set ls being rented to the producers of TV's 'Superman" series. ~. Q: Is Dolly Parton fating throat aurgery? -.R., ~ver, Colo. • At Surgery is not needed, declares a delighted lly. Her oondifJon ls one from which many gera and ·speakers suffer -the formation or es on the vocal chords caused by voice abuse. ~ IC you're lucky ll may be remedied by rest ~~ther than the knife. · ' : Q: Who slap the theme to "The Life and Ttmes Grlazly Adams"? And can I get It on a record! - Narlgon, PrescOU. lewa. ; A: The theme, "Maybe,'' is sung by Thom ce, who also wrote the lyrict with Bob Summers ,doing the music. No recordln& bu been made 1et' wp are advised. but one ls on the way. Send JIOUY queltiona '° H11 Gardrw1', "Olad' You ~ That," care of th'-~. P.O. Bo 156Q, Cb.to Meao 92626. Marilyn and H11 GordMr U>iU anNer a.a ""4nll qt.teltioM a.t they ca" tn tMfr column, b\C ua. l tJnhnne of mail make• per1onol repUe.t impontbtt. 1 rr . ............. What probably wll\ be th• flnal two •tis• produc:tioaa ot im alona \he ~an10 Oout arrive thLa weelr tor ab· •vl•ted fW\I, both preseoted by col· e drama deDNtmenta. , Gp•n1llJ ~ Wedne1day at OrJnC• Ooa-.t Collel It "Heat." a drama bUeil cm a true story about • YoiU'I boy who murdertd two tffn·•I• ctrla. On Frl\faf, UC Jr"ln•'• Drama Woruboip mount.a a two-.,erformanc. en111~meint of two Engene O'Nelll plays, "IJ•" and "The Long Voyage Home." DAVID NIVEN (LEFT), PETER USTINOV PLA VINO SECOND FIDOLE Unknown• Starring In Myltery Movie 'Death on the NII•• DRAMA INSTRUCTOR John Fenacca la dlrecttoc .. llHt .. at OCC, with Mlckey Swenson pla.ylq the klUer and Eddi Powell and Debbie Wolf cast as his victims. Performances wlU be given nJghUy through Saturday at 8 p.m. ln the Drama Lab Theater. Admiaslon is Unknowns Star free. UCI 1raduate students Patrick Flan1Wan and Alex Golson are dlrecl· tna the O'Neill plays, both stones with a 1ea beckground. Curtain time is 8 ' Neuxomers Head Caat of 'Nik.' p.m. andadmlssionls 75cepts. On the community theater circuit, the final two productions of lhe aeason CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Lois Chiles and Simon MacCorkindale are about the only names you wouldn't recocnlze immediately in the cast of "Death on the Nile," but they play two of the moat central roles in the film. MacCorklndale's last acUog until she left for lower their curtains this week with big role waa that or a "a qulet place .. -closlna nerformancea of .. Two for the Roman centurion \n Hollywood. Seeaawr.-at the San Clemente Com- Franco Zerrtrem 's TV M lu Chiles finished munJty Theater and "Barefoot ln the mo v l e. "Jesus of p k' b Nazareth .•• Not just any her Turkish corree and ar ' y the Mlsalon Viejo Repertory asked Leila. an Etyptlan Theater. centurion,lhouah. guide. t.o read her "l was Lucius. t.he cen· fortune ln the brown goo aauCE OGDEN and Suaanne Egli turlon whowu1uardlng atthebottomofthecup. star ln tbe two-character play the tomb when they dis-••s " d d ·t t " .. You wtll have a very eeaaw un er the direct.Ion of covere 1 was emp ~. M l w h he said. "Maybe there big success." Leila said. on ca eat erholt. Closlne ''Al th. ·1J performan~ wUl be given Thursday will be a sequel?.. ter 15• you wt start throufh Saturday at 1:30 at the Mias Chiles, a former I' new Ute, very lood•" c b 11 Pl . . • CabrUJo, SID Clemente. Resenatlou I .n·OC65. Tbe new Mllalon VleJo Repertory, which is maldnc lta debut with "Baref<>ot," Jlvea lta final ' performances or tho Nell SiUM>D com· ed)" Friday and Saturday at 8 o'clock t and SundllY al 2:30 ln Charier H.aU at l El Toro High School. Jahn Tbompeon and Alyssa VUva play the leadln roles under the dlrecUon of Ja.y Rayf. ReservaUons :;as..,. I THREE LOCAL profe11lonal tbeaten are conUnutni tbetr current productions. all pert'ormln1 every ' night but Monday. They are: -South Cout Repertory·= J ing "The Lut MeeUnt of tbe t of the White MaanoUa." at the ird i step Theater. 182T Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. The comedy·dram•. whlch ls altnott completely told out. 1 will be on stqe for two more weeb. • f Reaervatlonl St&-13e3. • 1 -Sebaatlan •1 Weat Dinner I Playbome, wttb 0 Gu11 and Dolli" at its theater, 140 Avenlda Pico, Sn I Clemente. Curtain times vary for W. musical comedy about Damon Rua· yon 's Broadway. Reservation.. I 492•9950. I -The Harlequin Dinner Playhouse, ortertng the lighthearted musical "She Loves Me" at 3503 S. Harbor ' Blvd., just north of Costa Mesa. 'J'lte show Jjlays tbrouah Jan. a. ReMl"Va- Uona 979-5511. Without them, there would be no murder. Peter Ustinov and David Niven would have no mystery to solve. Mia Farrow would have no one to stalk. And Bette Davis, Angela Lansbury, George Kennedy, Mag- gie Smith and a h<>&l of others would be out of jobs as prime suspects. New York model, has Mias Chiles agreed. • r 0 ayhouae, 202 Avenida ~n1Ugh~morev~I· 'Th~~~acU1theway~=~~1,=1=4=1=_=11=7=1=.~~~~~~~~-~-~~~~~~~~~~ ble to Amerl~an movie· I see it. You can see the Put• few word• goers. She played Robert path you 're on.'' to work for ou. Red ford 'a girlfriend ----------2======~=:::_ What's it like, the big break? "1 'M EXCITED and apprehensive, but I 'm enjoying it rlght now," said MacCorkindale, who has done mostly television work in Bri- tain. "I haven't got the ex- perience to know how what I'm doing translates to the big screen. ''You can't trunk about what (t will do or not do t.o yob," he said durlng lunch after an eight-hour before Barbra Strelsand 1ot hlm \n ''The Way We Were,'' and followed that with Jordan. an equally memorable role, in "The Great Gatsby.'' Ma cCorkindate, 25, started his career rive year• ago, playing tn repertory tbe•ter in Cov- entry, England. He starred in a British television series called ''Hawlieye. The Pathfinder," described u • sequel t.o 'The Lut of the Mobicans." MISS CIULES apent seven years ln New York modeling and atudyln& day o! filming at the ~~~~~~§~~l Sp hi n x . • ·So m a n y I, brllliant performers have never worked again. By contrast, many people make ldiota of them.selves and they go right on and work and work and work." Mias Cb.lJes said ahe, too, was not looklna for lns~nt at.ardom.. .., DON'T think about tt like that I don't think you really can. You jUJt bave to put that out of your mlnd tnd dolt." abe said. "cousiN COUStNr· ...... . ..,..... .. 1M .. ,_.._ ........ ,. "DAMNATION ALLEY" (PG) '. "FUTURe.wORLQ" (PG)_ "SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT'' (PG).' "THE STING." <PG) . "Wllllt ...... -,,.,.,,. ..... ~&UrOCMt Uf MY IMISft cMt fO• • d. 'IN!Y-ffkifM ... . . "'"'\•>1•1>1 f•'t• ,:w DIANI KEATON f I • KNEW HIS MARKET E. Howard Hunt • ,.,.w .......... CAUGHT IN WEB Richard Nixon Ja1nboree Birthday Honored WHEELING, W.Va. (A p ) -Jamboree tJ.S.A .. second only to Nashville's Grand Ole Opry as a shrine for country music concert fans, has celebrated Its 45th anniversary. "Thal Wheeling feel- ing" has been broadcast live every Saturday night since 1933 oo radio station WWV A. with the biggest names in the in· dustry belting out the top country bits. FAN LETTERS have -come from listeners ln Canada , Germany, Holland and England as ~ell as from U.S. resi· dents. And more than a quarter of a million peo· pie a year travel an average of 300 miles to see the five-hour show, better known as the Wheeling Jamboree. Station offlc.ials cstlm ate the show brlnga in $S million a year for Wheeling area busi· nesses. HANK SNOW, Merle Haggard, Buck Owens, Lynn Anderson, Loretta Lynn, Johnny Cub, Glen Campbell, Conway Twit· ty, Dolly Parton, the Statler Brothers , Charley Rieb, Charley fride, Porter Waaoner pd Donna Far,o are among the country superstars who have .. performed at the jam· boree. ''The station wu in· strument.aJ in my start," says Snow, a member of the Coun~ Music Hall or Fame. " pla~ed there In the winter ( 1946. 'They certainly helped me and my wife and young son survive a pov- tmy situation. The sta· lion was instrumental ln )Vhat success I've bad in this country.'• WARDNGTON (AP) -A new boOlt PfOPOWl4I UM theory that former CfA 11ent E. Howard Hunt waa "a sort of packa1er and pro- moter of ctandesUne operaUons" wbo maneuvered Richard Naxoo's admln1ttraUon into Wateraate and other mesal schemes. lo "With Nixon," tho former pre. 1ldent.'1 chief speecbwrtter, Raymond Price, aaya, "MY own IUeH la that aunt Wat not put up to these operations by tho CIA • . . More Ukely, if this theory is cor· reel. he was operattna as aq ln· divldual entrepreneur who Jtnew bls market." HUNT WAS ONE of the seven men convicted of conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping in the 1972 break-in of Democratic party offices in the Watersate office Price offers coovol\\-te4. acenatlos for Hunt•• lnvolftftlent. He HalNta that tbe root.a of tbe Watergate break-in were the fliin& by Howard Huabet of bis one~ trusted aide, Robert Maheu, U. .......... ,. WOODWAaD AND CARL Berns· tein, tMa &lao a Poat reporter, were tbe first to trace the Wateraate bUralary to Nlx011'1 um re-elect.loo tommlltee and wrote· two ~ about Water11te and Ua aftermath. Alter devoting seven paaes to bla Huot theory, Price write11 .. None ot this, even if true, ex· cuaes the Wbl.te House or the Com· mittee to Re-elect the Prealdent. lbe b~ins and bugging did lake place, and, at one level or another, they were approved by our people for what were perceivM to be our own reasons.•• -, "Wu te 31th president, Richard Nixon, tesman •xtrao filalre. wbo resliaped Ute worlcl ln pat- tern of his own arcbllec ure ot peace?" Price uks. "Or was he Tricky Dick, the shifty political COfl man?" PRICS ADDSc 0 11£ was botb - ahd lt took a Trtcky Dlck to brlna 1 the d,reams of tbe statesman to re· ality . . . the cynl<tal Nixon ot tbo lral)acripta eounded like hunr.tredl of other cynical poUticlana arid commentators and reporters, who present a public face to ihe wwld and a private face lJ) their clot•t assoc lat.es. T "Nixon waa destroyed ~use be was caught. And he was ca~t, finally, in a web spun of 11\tdl\lltl fully as devious as th06e df-Wblcl) be himself was accused." " ' et•&@rt Nee~ He thinks a ·state eh~~ should be able to cash>your check state -· e. I . - Even though Bob manages our office in Hawthorne, his branch will cash your check if y0~have an account with us in San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego-at any of our IO?· branches around the state. J .. "Our compu~er terminal system makes it possible. It puts all the information right there witn the teller:' · · .. · That means that one dilif ornia First teller takes care of all your banking transactions__:_ from cashing a check to accepting a loan payment. .. '~ .. about the only thing . ' our computer system wont do is balance your checkbook:'· Get to know one of the fastest groWing major banks in the state. CALIFORNIA FIRST BANK McmberF.01 C. ·~ ~Fust. I I . ..... - fl ... '.,: INSID : •Ann Landen .•Comics •Erma Bombecl&:· Catholie ·sehools ·~ believe education is not only of the mind but the total person. We teach them how to behave, how to relate · in Christian, effective ways.' · . By J UDITH OLSON Of1Mo.i1,~1i.t~ '•Love o/ our democracy through underatanding of ita high ideal.a. re!pect for our lfodera ~cauae the source of aU authority 1a recognlud, equality among mm because knowledge banuhes pNjudjct -through all these Maler De1 develops vigaJant cilizeM." ••• Whlle public schools are worrying about declining enrollments and falling reading scores. Catholic hlgh schools and parochial schools are worrying about where to put the overflow and how to keep the bright students challenged. In spite of problems with finance and space, Catholic schools currently seem to be enjoying one of their best periods in hlstory, statistics show. Mater Del High School, in Santa Ana. for ex- ample. send'l more than 97 percent of its graduat- ing class each year to college and last year near- ly half the members were semi-finalists in the California State Scholarship program. The school has always had a waiting Ust and officials hope to build additional buildings soon to increase the student body capacity. Most of the students work to help pay their $600 per year tuition, an indication of their desire to attend what is essentially a school with strlct discipline and stringent academic require- ments. What is the attraction of parochial education over tax-supported public schools? In two county Catholic schools, Mater Dei and St. John the Baptist elementary In Costa Mesa. the same themes were stressed by parents. teachers. and students: Christian education, sacrifice. discipline and community. Parents hke the school because the "bottom line" is a '"Christ-centered education," and also because it offers strict discipline. Teachers and students choose parochiaJ <'ducat ion because o( the feeling of community it offers. and the whole experience is meaningful for all because of ~e sacrifices each person must make to participate. There arc problems, too, such as finding enough money to pay teachers competitive salaries, but there ls a general feeling of op- timism in the Catholic school today • ••• Catholic schools were born ln Europe during the end of the 17th century or the begirtning of the 18th, according to Brother Dcnninic Berardelli. superintendent of schools for the Diocese or Orange. They were popularized by the patron saint of the Christian Brothers, St. John Baptist de la Salle, a Frenchman, and came to the U.S. with the large immigrant waves of the 19th century. Parochial schools were successful here, Berardelli speculated, because they provided a focal point for ethnic neighborhoods whlch were largely Catholic. John Merino, an assistant vice principal at Mater Del, added that the minority feeling made the parents more supportive of the schools. "Catholics have alw.ays been in the minority in this country and as such, have been looked down on,'• he said. The schools · arc "a reinforcement or what should be going on In the family," Berardelli added. '1'hey have always had the same thrust -the bullding up of a faith community is the whole aim and purpose." Parenti also are enco\ll'aged to partklpate in parish education through sermons at church and this, coupled with the long tradition, has made parochlal schools succusful throuth the years. ·'Teacher dedication is part of it." BerardelU said. "We don't have a lot of &immicks and the teacher has to go in with everything he or she has. They have to prepare well." About 6S percent of the teachers in Oran1e County's parochial schools are lay teachers, Berardelli added, but it is not necessary for them · to be Catholic. "We look for Catholics to continue the commwiJty of faith but it's not a bard line. We have some marvelo~ examples of non- Catholic teachers.'' Berardelli is slightly worried that bla schools Michael Haas, 4th grade teacher at St. John the Baptis t. will be affected by integration. "Our waiUng Usts are getting longer," he said. "I don't want our schools to be havens for escaping Integration." ·He ls hoping the financial situation will be eased by a proposed tuition tax credit act. which has been integrated into the social security itct and now is waiting a jofnt House-Senate commit- tee hearing. The bill. which was originally ihtroduced as the Packwood-Moynihan Tuition T~ Credit Act bf 1977, would allow parents lo deduct' tuition paid to private schools from their i.nCOJl'le tax and therefore would, Berardelli expl.lned, oCfer more aupport for private education. Interestingly. administrators at neither .Mater Dei nor St. John the BapUst knew or parent groups working for the passage of this blll. ••• Mater Del High School is a busy place, bunt· iJlg at the seams. Unlf on:ned atudenb scurry from class to class to a pep rally and teachers wear buttons and ribbons touting an important upcoming game. The busOe is presided over hy Father Michael Hanis, a handsome younc priest who ls a Mater Dei graduate himself. "Mater Del offers a great deal to the stu· dents who come here." he said. "Its strength is lta Christianity. The students grow closer in their love ol God and one another and themaelve1-. They are very ba_ppy, afCectionate and spirited. "There's a lot of joy on the camp~. The children feel cared for." More than ~00 elect to The Rev. Michael Harris, left, principal of Mater Dei, with student Tim O'Hara. attend communion service. durina their-lunch hour every day. "We have a very active Christian service program here too," Fatt\er Harris said. •'Tbere are also prayer groups, Bible studies, retteats and days or recollection. We train the kids to be religious educators. "We also demand a lot of our kids. We Sister Eileen teaches eight/I grade at St. John the Baptist SchOol in Costa Mesa.· Brother Dominic Berardelli, • Orange Diocese school superintendent. Sister Mary Vianney, principal. wfth St John students • believe in homework aiMt we have very hi1h en.. clpline standards. We believe education ls not only -or the mind but the tot.al person. We teach them how to behave, how to relate ln Christian. ef. fectiveways." Father Harris added. "We try to strive for excellence in our faith, studies and atbletict. Our <See CATBOUC. Pase CZ) 'Being in Israel is not only bging in another .country. It ·;s a way of life .. .It is a part ·-I Luzzeta Bernard PROUDLY ANNOUNCES Gabriel Gallegos Expert ftalr Sfyta1t. from Spain, hat' ' Jotned our Staff of Holt txptrfal Fashion For Today's Woman 11 Fashion Island, Newport Im . Chrishnas gifls that are sure to please ••• we send gifls of good taste We'll Nndle •ti the details •nd •wn enclose • P11"onal greet1ng. Texas Spread 1 lb. BEEF STICK Suml'Mf S.u,..i, 12 oz. Mild Mldgff lonvhom, 5 OL Smoky C""9e BM',, 01. Pfei11 Goud•. 7~ OL Belle Fleur, 8 oa. Ed•m Stldc, plus Str1wt.rrv Bonbons. 15.98 Plul gu1onteed dellv•y chi~• If lhlppec:I <From faioCl) children really achieve. We've 1one to the playoff a In every ma.ior sports." The principal aho ii r.~. ho 11Jd. "Whtll l &O tato a cl'Usrocnn ~ atudtnta atand \lP ~Jrtel me. as 1 boM1.bey would ai& •dult." tM•ter Del itudenCa are requlrtd t6 wear uni. tonn• and keep the!t -penoeaJ appearance to a certain ~ard. wblcb alto soe. Ilona with the pr1nc\Ple Of hcrifl'ce. Studem. who five up aome me .. ure ot pereonu freedom hi aetecUn& their cloth .. and addUJon~y 'tfOrk to belp pay their tuJUon ~ 10. • lnl to ce\ a lot more.out of achool, the prlnclpal explained. • "Tbe pbJJOtlophy 1• 'that If you rn&Jte a ,.crifice to come to acbool you •Ps>reclate tt more.11 He believes that Cath9Uc education la ln a "very bealthy atate now. I feel that lt we ever Jose private eduatign In thJs country we've lost a lot." . . . " John Burson bas tautbt at Mater Det for tbe last 15 years end bas no plans to 10 anywhere elle. "Moral values and rellaton are very Impor- tant,•• be said. ''I teach seniors and I can make a statement of that . .Relitlon ls very Important to me.'' He said one of ~e factors in the acbool 's academic success ls the fact that teachers are wllllnl to work overtime. · "In the math department. for example, every teacher la available after school and many are here Wore school." be said. ..Tbe En1U1b department baa eone back to bulcs. There la a· stre111 on reading and wrltln1." ••• Jodi Green, a senior, elected to come to Mater Del because she thou1ht it would help her do better in j:Ollege. "I've seen my )>rother come throueh thls school," she said, "and he has gotten erounded. I feel l 've got a ~tter chance after coming here. "I like the people too, and the football games. We're all involved in what evetyone •lse does. It's like a big family.'' ••• Sister Vianney, principal of St. John the Bap- tist, btelleves the success of her school la due to the cooperation of the parenta. . "We have a hlther level of parent cart.nc," she said. "And our teachers are very dedicated. They make a sacrifice by worldna In a Catholic school but they are where they want to be.'• Of the 16 teachers on her stalt, 12 are Jay persons and four are sisters. One of the 12 ii a man, Michael Haas, who teaches fourth srade. Religion also ls subtly present throu1hout the school. "It la taught once a day but there ls a prayer preceding each class period," 'Sister Vlanney said. "And each class goes t.Q maasonce a week." Jn h~r 15 years at St. John she has SJen four or five families send M least 10 childNn throuch the school and currently there are five children from one family enrolled. Tuition ls $olO per month for one child, ~ tor two or more and ~for three or more. Unlike Catholic high schools, the elementary schools experienced a decline in enrollment dur· ing the early 70's, but they too have waJUna liatl now. Sister Vianney, sitting in her office, which £. decorated wtth a banner proclaiming that "God Made the Irish No. 1," suggested some reasons for the decline and current surge. "I may be wrong on this but I think the enrollment dipped because the population decreased. It's up because parents are afraid 01 the situation in public schools -violence, dru1s. lack of discipline . "We ba.ve never had drugs on campus. One student was involved three years ago but that was outside the school. It was taken care t>f lm· mediately." If there are any kind of problems, Including homework, the parents are called. "There la f re· quent communication between the parent and the school," Sister Vianney empnail.leCL · How do teachers feel a~t their jobs, which mlgbt be scomed by those looking for h11ber salaries and less call for dedication? Marty Muehen, a third grade teacher, replied tbat she isn't working tor tbe money In the first place. I "We inat four boys through Catholic schools aod t wa.s so happy with the reauJta. I'm a public: school result myself. 1 'm workinl to live back the good my boys got.'' CHlll>REM1S Don't Pull Santa's Btcird BAGO Young •un~ c~n hit the deck In this classy companion to Mom's Of Dad's dandy D~ksldes. Supertor Sebago quality Is everywhere. f,rom the white rubber, aure-grlp, non· ·,up sofe to the etk·tanned cowhide upper that retfetf .t0uHlng a~ f1dlng, this sure.footed Sebago Is. made In t~~ µ.S.A1 J>Y •killed Maine craftsmen. tn tan and dark bfQWn l•ather. Slzet: 12111to3. s22. 3111 toe. u~ . . . \ S4 PAMOH m.A ... ~ llACH f4MJJJ • 27 East Main st .. Alhambra (213) 282-3818 &.nk Amettc:ard • Mat« Charge • Hemphill Chlrge your choice... .• ANNLANDERS J HO~OSCOPE DEAR ANN · We have been heartn& a lol M bout ballered wives but it now appear'$ thst husbands sulf er more domestic violence \ban their mateb A study bponsorcd by the National Institute ot Mental Health revealed that mtn Wllct more serioUA physical damage but the so·call~ wcak~r sex goes on the offensive much more frequently Ala.o, It wus Jurned lhat the number or wives who kill their hu:ibandb lSJUslaboutthesameaa females who weft vice veraa. or the 47 murdered were done lJ\ mllhOQ. married couples by thelr husbanda. 10 Lhe U.S., approximate· Mf'anwhlle, the other ly 1.7 mllUon have gone coast i.an'l dolna much after each other with better. Bost.on <which ls guns or knives. supposed to be \be cradle Californla stai.atlcs of clasa and tntellec· show that one-third of all tuallsm) reported th• in YOU'RE NEXT! TAKE 60 MINUTES and look your best for the holidays! •ACNE • WRINKLES • ORY SKIN • LINES •BLEMISHES • OILY SKIN HOM-SURGICAL .•. face lifting can begin wit Ji JJOur first visit! CaU For Information TOD.AY •o~ the Boston City Hospital, 1 about 70 percent or all as· • • saull victims cared for in ~ the emergency roQms were spouses who bad been attacked by a Bank whprc she worked ~. husband. u wlte or a as a teller. She told the lover. Judge she felt "entitled" • How does that speak to the tnoney because fil for a "civllized" acx:iety? abe used a lot or lt to help JUST PLAIN FACTS right such "wrongs" as MA 'M financial setbacks suf· 0 DEAR J UST: Ver y ,feredbyherbrotherwho ~ poorly. I 'll be\ t b e had seven children and alllmal ldnSdorn ls leas her father whose pension ~ violent than maa'a. Can evaporated when the It be that what we call milk company he worked "progress" 11 attuaUy a for went bankrupt. " • atep 1n tbe o&laer dlrec-She also felt "entitled" tlon? to a $6,000 boat, a $12,000 ~• DEAR ANN: What is mobile home, a vacation happening to our coun-in Ne.w Hampshire try? This story is not (wblch she paid for with ~ made up. 1l appeared in the deposltors' money) Time magazine. ' and a $2.000 loss suffered o A 40·y~ar-old woman at the racetrack. ~r~ Nltf'U S84.958 from Boston's to jail. The judge or- fi7 •/ ~ admitted embenling The woman did not go d South Shore National dered her to work six SKIN CARE CENTER .~ HU~!~:-:.?~.!'.!'CH ' .~"t!'!'". .. , m ( Horoscope ) o~ '--------------------------------' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WEDNF.SDAY,DEC.7 whine. sing lhe blues or ;;.: By SYDNEY OMARR imbibe to excess. CAPR ICORN CDec . joyce·selby shoes - We have a SURPRISE IN SI ORE for you! Watch for it! AR IES (March 21 · April 19): Emphasis on lhe occult mystery, de- term inlng what budget should be. Partner or mate is involved, more so than u sual. Get money's worth. TAURUS (April 20- May 20): Go slow. Let others cnll signals Absorb knowled_se. store clues for future use. Play waiting game. Jo'lnish rather than initiate proj- ect. GEMINI CMay 21-June 20): You get job done by maintaining in~pendent stance. Love sparks creative efforts. Ultraconservative as- sociate may have to be left behind. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis on commitment, business investment, relationship that Is serious and in- v o Ive d . Accept responsibility. You will receive ''UUe" and more money. AQUA RI US (Jan :ZO-Feb. 18 ): Emphasis on prestige. how you re· late to superiors. abilily to "take charge." Finlsn rather than begin -rest. experiment, broaden horizons. Aries, Libra figure prominenUy so does number9. P ISCE~ (Feb. 19· March 20): You get ''second chance.•· Whal seemed lost can be locat· ed. What appears far away will be within reach. Key, is to make most oC '"recovered op· port unities.·' hours" week lD a Botton ho1pltal for Sut montb.ll. Th~ bank 1"4 tbe boat and lhe mobile home and the problem of bow ,to ktep the other bank employees Crom exe~i.J. lnt THEIR f eellngs ot "entlUement." What do~====~=~:;==~~=~====~~~ )'OU thlnk of this, Ann ..: Landers? -JUSTICE WHERE ART THOU? DEAR I V TICE: I tbJU the • is you. Tbe ,..bole lbliis tmell• Uke a ba,.1 of'lost ber- rt.Dc. ' DEARANN : Whalcan I do about neighbors •nd relatlves who don't even wall for me to answer the doorbell:' They just walk In. My husband likes to sit around In his undershorts, which Is OK with me. Tbese uninvited people seem horrified to find a man hal!·dressed in hJs own home. How about supplying me with a Jazzy answer to slh1g back at the in· truders -when they look down their noses at us? 1t happened twice Jast week. -JlOSJ E DEAR ROSIE: A lock OD ~e door wUl work bel- t er &ban a "jauy,. anJwer. I 1qgest you try It before a st ran cer walks In and cleaoa' you out. CONFIDENTIAL to Should I Go Out on a Li m b?: Cert ainl y! Th at's where the fruit lst .. Important! ••. Don't ll\ltl> DJv1d L1cJcr; man'> ~·xClttng Jem0n>tr;\• tlon l.lf 111~ lJl~~c culinary t:ri:JllOn • • 5auc1.:r! bcl.11mcJ worlJ.widc a~ 1he 1mtant v."3y to trul~ gour1111:t b3l!CCS. \V..:dnl."S• JJ~. Dccen1bcr 7 .lt 3 .00. ' WILLJAMS-SONOMA '1·u1h c .. ,,, Pl~~., Lmt ·' '>.1aa 7S I· Ill-() <:.111 frm<H ··I 110 ·\Ir tt~\ ··1h 11111.. c ...... Mt,.I The Perfect Christmas Gift ICE SKATING LESSONS AND SKATES Call NOW for lnformatlo" or Visit Our Chalet• •SPECIAL SESSIONS DUAINQ CHRISTMAS VACATIOftS •Public Se1tlon1--0lse~ on\ce •Group & Blrthdey Perty AllH I JOIN THE FUN -ICE SKATE ICE CAPADES CHALET AN D SKATING SCHOOL Cost a Mesa Harbor & Adams . 979-8880 TOYS · for TOTS Dec.18th Costa ltlesa Bristol & Paularino 979-1750 '' Upper Level , Nea r M ay Co. South Coast Plaz a Costa Mesa CANCER (June 21· July 22)· Accent on children, change. varle· ty. speculation. Roman· tic affai~al~do~ioate. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Your intuition now is I We'll handle all th• de111ls and even enclose~ ~nonal g•ffhng. boned lo razor - sharpness. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22); Emphasis on getting a square deal. obtaining facts and figures, de· termlning peyccntages, going wltn the odds. Home, security, older family member are pert of your personal · scenario. VIRGO (Au,. 23-Sept. 22): You get chance to experiment, to diversify, to be humorous, ~o deal with relatives in manner that creates harmony. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. · 22 >: Accent on money, chance to locate lost artl· cle, a way of balancing budget, mak.lng collec· Uons and payments. Be a n a I y t l c a l. P l e c· e together bits or ln(orma· lion to come up wllb complete story. SCORP IO <Oct. 23· Nov. 21 ): lAlnar cycle hiJh -take inJUatlve. Strive for style, ortglnalJty. Taurus, Libra persons are in pic- ture. You receive ac- colade from family member. SAGl'ITARWS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Ge\ vitw from back staircase. Mean• don't be satisfied wltb surface ap- f earances. Steer away ro rtt self· de~tptioll. Face f~ ~ ttiey exl1t. Be carefuJ of thoee who proml1e the world, wl\o ... ROBES IDEAL FOR GIFTING • C4 DM.YN.OT "But we can't trim the tree! We ~aven't bought one yetl'' ~UNKY WINKERBEAN AAO NOW LET'5 GO TO 808, OOR 5mFF METEOROLDGl5T J MOON-MULL I NS su~, 11u RACE YOOTOT~E ® COJl).IER,, }(',AYO·· If -you _......,..," W,A~I('. ,( 1~a. 'f D/fV#.f<O w I FrlANCINI!, HtY £.OVS, GORDO WEU. , ONCE AGAIN WE DON'T EXPECT pt/.J ME1'tOR& 10 61RIKE 1ME ClW I , By ChlrfH Aodrlgu11 ' DR.SMOCK YA WANNA KNOW W~A"T"1S WRON~ Wl.,.H YOU, L.APY ~ I PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz by Roger Brldffeld oi 0 0 0 0 0 __ .,._,___ ~""'""'.ii!'!!~Q - 0 bV George Ltmont ...... ~ •1 Ptfforatld by Templeton 1nd Forman I H!Y, AAF.~< GC#IB ~RE AW ft\E&T1 1H6 NEW GUY~ t BA holder 49 r:.r Ethel UNITED FMturt Syndlcatt s:-... -·-Moftdl(•l'llUlllol.W:_._,.. coif' 83 Dlfftt• ... 9 Hid Pino• 57 Climblno 14 Slttttlt ·-· Vine Stienllar 158 Atgatd wleh ~M+Ttffl:ft 15 One ol HIMm courage 5t Franch OOft -....+l!~ffW 1ecropclo1tly 11 Moldtno 11 Fancy ectoe: Var. 11 NaCl 82 Ounce 1. Warn!""' 13 Kl8G cttvk:e... 84 Attall price 20 Hlla1lt1 es Afr. ~...M+lofflo 22 08'ttaroet• ee r;:= 2• = Ollt of colna 28 PttceNt 97 "otlc:tt · 27 Otralnl'a DOWN 291!~ 1 Soot 21 Aalan ahrub 43 Strono dtlnk degrH 2 Spoktt 23 E¥t't 45 Explenetory 30~0lner'• !Z~•••Y 2ari:"°" •7=n 33 AcctHOrlH • lrffltMnl 21 Atllenct 48 Ov.rwMlm 37N.Y.Olenta' 611)1.,jtcllOna 3031 ~~ 1.._ 50Ftmlnlne blO na!M of turprl" ..,.,, on ,,. neme 38 Of"k letter e Hold up Oka 51 Licorice 39 Equal 7 FttnCh city 3332 SoftR flaVOttd toottno I Ptrlphtral: •P•· Med 40 Rul"• 2 worda 3' Defy '1 la~r e Hockey 35 Ptraian 12 ~ 421ndi'ildually atatltllc poet : 631r.ttM 4-4 Wetoht ot 10 S.aaonlng '8 T Hllle\wl• 14 Adof*9 Ol'l6 India 11Tortoite'I 31~~eAodt 6SAllltlH I •9=~1..,. 12~~nt 40.:,..y &eFlildaf~ •t Strinotd hetdly __ ,. bedott alol'I lnatrUll'lent 13 Scout unlta 42 Ory up 80 Vttc" •• •• • NATtON /WORLD Quake R o cks Soviet Area MOSCOW (AP) -An eartbquab meUW'iQI seven poblta on the 12-polnt Sovie( aule 1truck the area of Tashkent. in Sovl9' central Alla ~. the Soviet newa aaency Tass reported. Tau aaJd the quulce, centered about ~ mil• norUlweat ol the clty, struck at 5:53 a.m. PST. The agency said there were oo cuualUea or dealrucUon. Tass aaid the quake meuured elehl pointl at Ill eplcen~r. a force that is aald to cauae some earth openlnca and serious damaae to buildinas. ...,,a Aide Nl•e• 1t111 LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -A personal aide to lloward Uupes for many years aaya the eccentric mulU·mllllonaire lold him that he bad writ.ten a will, but that he does not think the so-called Mormon Will was penned by Huehes. Teatimooy in a trial ( J to determine whether IN SHORT Hughes actually wrote '""------------· the Mormon Will went in- to its third day today. Hughes' relatives claim the purported wUI Is a forgery, while former Hughes aide Noah Dietrich, named by the wiU as the ex- ecutor of the estate, is seeking to have the three· page document declared geoulne. C..tre .,,,... 011 Troop• HAVANA (AP) -Fidel Castro told lhe United States today that Cuba Is unwilling to negotiate Its withdrawal of troops from Africa even lbouah lhe issue is blocking normalization between lhe two na· tions. "Our relationships with Africa we cannot dJa. cuss. That. we cannot negiotiate," lhe Cuban presi· dent told American reporters durlng an bour·long interview in bi5 office. "Jf it becomes an issue oow, it's going to become an impediment to normal relations," Castro s&Jd at the end of a five-day visit lo the Caribbean island by two U.S. congressmen. Salldu Seek OH l'r~ze JIDDA, Saudi Arabia <AP) -The oil minister or OPEC's largest producer. Saudi Arabia, was quoted today as saying the Saudis will seek an oil price freeze for 1978 at the cartel's Dec. 20 meeUna in Caracas, Venezuela. The newspaper Okaz reported that Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani said Saudi Arabia would coo· tinue its policy annou.nced at the Stockholm meet· lng of lhe Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries m July. ''The kingdom declared then lhat the 10 percent raise was effective for the remaining part of 1977 as well as 1978." Yamanl was quoted as saying. ··Hence there is no need to put the price rise Issue on the agenda of the forthcoming meeting in Caracas." V.S. E11«h African Aid WASHINGTON CAP) -The United State& is ending its aid programs to the Cenlrai African Em· pire, officially because of human rigbta violations. but also, sources say, because of the ewavagant coronation staged by Its president Jast weeJcend. State Department officials are said to be dis- turbed by the miJlions of dollars spent by the poor African country on the lavish coronation or Presi- dent Jean-Bedcl Bokassa, who proclaimed himself' emperor. The cost or the coronatlon has been eshmated as high as $30 million, about one-fourth of the cou,ntry's annual income. WASHINGTON CAP) -Muriel Humphrey, 65-year·old wife or Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, ls ex· peeled to remain at Wasbln&ton Hospital Center for about a week to recover Crom exhaustion, a Hum- phrey aide said. Betty South. Humphrey's press secretary, said Mrs. Humphrey is in the hospital for "a com- plete rest." Nancy Solomonson, the Humphreys' daughter. said Mrs. Humphrey was sutrerelng from "heavy exhaustion," which the relative attributed lo Mrs. Humphrey's massive workload and recent gall bladder suraery. 1'1a11 K iib ft~ Sell COQUILLE, Ore. <AP) -Coos County authorities report a man apparenUy killed three people Ud wounded two others with (Ullfire before shooting himself lo death. Sherill's Sgt. Gene Vlot aald Jimmie D. Moore killed his wlt4' and 3-year-old child Monday at hla home near Sltlcum, a Coast Range community 1a· m ilea east of Coquille in south western Oregon. A(ter :U-year-old Phyllis Moore and the Moores' daughter, Kimberly Sue, were killed, Don Laird, ..0, was killed and Gary Briggs, 30, and Connie Flab, 18, were wounded. Nlllce B aa Ta llu lie•~ GENEVA, Swltterland <AP)-After a month's rue11, the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union resumed talks Monday on a treaty bannlna underground nuclear test explosions. Nuclear blaata in the air, atmoepbere and 1ea already are banned under the MOIC01V Treaty of 196.a. A ban oo undereround exploelom would mean a atop on all nuclear eitplosions. PUBUC NOTICE 0 .. . ...... DAILY PILOT 10VER657 Own a home too valuable> to sell without heavy tax? Then wby not sea one of our tr•lned ~ tor wus tC> reduc~ tax•. No cbarti•l ConlldenUalt Phono for ._ _______ •I appoantmenl! 67Mt61 ........... ,. ....................... o ... ,.. 1002 ....................... WHAT DO YOU GITFott $150,000l A custom bwlt 4 bdrm Mesa Verde home locat- ed in a very preatige area. Very cloae to the cowrtry club. This Is a home to see and \on. Take actlon now. 5'84313 Ol'(N 1119• II SI~ 10 111 "1CI' ~THE REAL l ~~ ES_T~TERS I THI C AWSOM C O • REALTORS 2119Newport Blvd. N.B C~ONA Hl&HLAHDS -Surprise! A 2 bedroom home with small lncom~ unit (lqal) to help pay• I.be Costa. Also a l("e&~ swimming pool tor youq plHntrellreluaUoo. 1 cou Of HI WPORT I RKALTORS 675-5511 ' MOUNT AIH VIEW1 NEWHOUSE 1 IARGAIH Luxurious 3100 aq. fl. home on hillside wit~ apectacular view or ano capped Saddlebac Mount.alm. Luxuriously appointed with premium features too -.umeroua tct Jlat. Priced under bwldeni current prict.J Al~ Vlu.A for 11eU un.ll at S1G, SPAMtSH a 11 For appotntment to 1 HACH $7f ,tl 0 spec:t,ca11982-T7113. Arcbtd formal entry to · K€Y · dramatic living room P.E_ ALTORS with cathedral open -----------t beamed ceUlna • noorto oeilin1 fireplace. Wall ot ilaU viewa terrace aod fosh irounds. Majestic a&' muter suite with ad· iolnlni 1arden vJew. Separate chfldreo'a sult.. Hurry • Vacant - Newc&rDetl Call963-7881 O#fN 11(9; Ii S 11.J~J 108' NICI' SIX UNITS In xlnt rentaJ locatJon N. Costa Men. Btt layout with l&e. poo( added attracUoo, e&o. to maJ« abopJUI • b libes. Just Introduced the market. 646-Tnl fllllll ~·~~ c;: Walkm f: Ll!I! OCEAHFIOMT THI FIMIST HOME M By owner. dupleic, 2 Br l YOUHAVI SllM l Ba ea unit. W. Nwpt. Ta1tefu1Jy enlaraecl 548-7219; 556M221 home oo a 1aree lot. Slld-i--------1 ing a1au door ace.a tQ OCIAHFIOMT lattice covered real' By ownr, dplx &lboa, 4 patio from famJJy room, Br 2 Ba, le 2 Bl' 1 Ba. den and maater bdrm_. 1548-1219; ~1 study. Located In one OJ -----------.Costa Mesa's beat V& TUMS nei&bborbooda. Call no OHL Y $62,500 and buy In n bQYer Best buy ln the area. Ai market. 5'8-2313 condlUober and som Oflf~'119·•1 HutHtrtf other nice xtra '•· C.llln us is a must -The d biteal A quick eacow this year's b e• Christmas present I )'OW'I. 546-%113 OllfN Ill 9• II SFUH rOtHKf' llVINE EXECUTIVE SPICIAL flf •Ill' new lrvlne ex- eeut.ift bome w 1• bdnu, ----------1 3 baths, new epta, eatin IMVISTMBn'I drpa, eircwar brick out- PllCl 19UCTIOM side entry1 parquet en- T b d b trance bah, am.r bdrm wo e room om• suitA!. Sunken 11., rm & family rooin. on R·2 lot, with l bdrm apt la bacJc. rmly rm. RatMd frml din Income per month could rm. Self c~ oven. be ~. Prtme reota Trash compact.or. Too area. Unbellevabl tnany elth'as to list. priced. 566-2313 Same model J\llt sold tor CW1ru.,,.sAJNmt1H1C11' SJ.4,000 more than YO\J ~]{ THE REAL , ESTATERS -.J THIS WAS A FIXBUPPIR The 01mer eoWdo'l wall • ' i i 1 ·~ l ' TH[ Hf.At . ES1 Al [RS I -J c:an have this ooe ror! e48·7711 ~ Walkr.1 & l r.t! You cfoo't ne.G a •\IA t.o MW llACK """ ''dniw taat.'' •hen you place u ad In lb4t DaU1 HO ~ALIFYIMG J>tlotWant Adal CCU now · $140,000 ~. ~ aharp, new POOi bQm6 Just one toll• from Peopl•. who need Pec>l)le ltlldY l>oaeh. .No quUry1 That'• what tbe ln&-Call Mack, "2·'7781. DAILY PJlhl' • KEY SERVICE DIRECTORY • A£AL10RSA ii all about! • I .. Ho.us For Sal9 Houfft FOr S• Hovi•1 POr SW Hovtft •or Sdt o.ws .... S. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~...,.. HcMM1,.,W. ca, .. ,., 1002 ...:..r1nl •• '1001 Meio tOH M.141 1024 '-'••v.-Y t034 ·•····················• ·······-····· .. ····•··· ........ ,~············ ...................•..• •·••··········••··••·•· ....................... ······•··············· •.......•.•..........•••....•......•..•••..... tot! • t002 .,_... 1001 CLOSITO .:•CH•~ c~..1-MlSAWOODS •tor'•drnm.2 try • ••• •••••• •••••-•••• •••••• ••• ••• ••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• ...,.. ~Bd ~ 'C::-UllllllU DICUTIVI I/SID! . am belt hm. 4br +iitudy IYY COYalD SHJM•U CorTAGI No f ool·in ! 2 bedroom. l bath shin1led home with beamed ceilings, paned windows, shake roof and a winding brick walk thru and ivy covered yard. No fool-in, but there's more, a aunny detached one bedroom income unit with it's own private patio yard. Both for $158,900! No fool-in! U~l()U I: liVMl:S REAL TORS': 675-6000 SEE WHAT'S HEW TODAY! The Ink ls barely d ry on the llaUnl of thiaeleaant family home; it coiailts of 3 bdrma.t !•mlly rm. & formal dlnlng rm. ; the 1»ended tones of blue & green provlde a restful atmosphere, 1eneraJ· ly found ll) much more eq>enslve homes. The landacaping is prof eu. maintained; the ln'egular siie & con· tour of the lot lends to Ul• eye appeal. LOcated in a ~lgh.ly upgraded secUon of MESA VERDE -only $129,500. 759"0811 4!'>0 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 759-0811 DUP.LIX rm, 2 a, 2 p.rJtlJ\& COST A MESA & I m rm Access to 3 1pace1. Subterr1rnun POOL HOMI l S7 pools 1teps to schl & tYraold, clean, 3 & 18R. 1arau. 1ecurll)' bldg. Gre•l h~ry for your l&l" Z,000 ahopill '•trn 4rp1 • Cpt'f, ~rapet, blln•, 4 11111,000. Call Pepper trnly. 4 bdrm. fmly rm ls 3 Bodrrn. huaie lot. w llp~fl r t br uout. car lat, tl~. Jones rnnt dln rm. Thl1 ran· Complete wit.ti h ardwood •tow mrkt ~· Opn s 159 900 CONTINENTAL wUc noor wan ullow1 floor, dbl lllt', COVt'rt'fl llu. t Sun I 0110 J •COIS\.:a•LTY REALTY yow-,uat.a to riow trom patio&: <1alet 1tret:t Out "' RSA 9~7-1319 fmtnrm to llv rm " or atate owner necdit •m ~-hiClt I 040 675-6670 kitchen out Into the btJI media~ •le Super buy.••••••••••••••••••••••• •--~~------Capl'11wohch 1011 1arden1 • pool areu1 hurry!Cal1Mt·58i0 ••ooODO_. ~ ................ ••••••• w/jacux.zJ. 545-8491 ... .,..." CIHf Dr n-a..a OCU9'FaOMT ... aeta you into thlt 2 BR, • .. ..,..... 2 BA c<M\do. Cl~ to th Cus~ft) on•ol·u·lclnd-LIYIHG beach, auper 11\arp Hd beamed C linJ1, warm A rare find on Beach a-al "'·tale low puymeoa.. Olrc:ted aL wooct. enbanct thla 2 Road. 3 BR, 2 BA home. '""' ..,. only $4!1,800. bedrrn, dinlna rro home. Inviting aurf & a.and at HOMI & IHCOME-WHY HOT SH 540-3666 Second wtlt is fresh and yourdcior-atep. '300,000. Jn Costa M-Jl. Owner Make your comm•tmeot new and has 2 bedrmt Ii 4 ~.. on 3 Bdrm home. Suv<• roz.y paUo. A real find for A.MCHOIAGI ..rill carry '1' >".'o loan Owner. C"l 1 6···3"9" thls etabbo hood 93x300' Cor. lot PLUS :l .. •v • " o • r • INVISTMBITS chw-ming 3 BR & lien. 2 5pm-8pm ---- ll90.000. 17141 496.7711 ba homes. PLUS l 2 Bit COLLEGE PARK 4 BR, 2 _____ __.........__ PETE BARRETT. Duplex. PLUS room to Bo. newly deocorated, BUY BEFORE -REALTY-C.-cWM• 1022 b"lld more un1ta. ncw cprt.11&drps $8050() ••••••••••••••••••••••• $225,000. Try $35,000. 546·8477 Agt. · ' · PRICE HOUSEALOM.E down.~ 111o.1CRE.a.SE ~ ls worth thla price. But ~ HANDYMAN-S "" "' you can live near the Re.tto67r?·~t.1907 DREAM HOME * $57,900* tAf IJeln11 UAL l\IAll 642-5200 IASTSIDE DUPLEX 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar also 1r;i Mesa Vl·rde . .il 546-5990 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~1 3 B r house+ 1 Br 1eparate apt. Close t o beach io Corona del Mar ,._ Don't dcluy I Save ofl thl11 & have tenants help Fantastic opportunJty spacious 2 story condo! pay ... $175,000. New Condos. 2 Br. 2''1 Ba, ror the handyman seek· Featuret 2hr, 2ba & 2 cur 1002 Ge••" 1002 ................. , .................••......... !:~~ .......... ~~!~!:~ .......... ~~!~ c , ~IM ... PENINSULA POIMT 4 Bdrm .. 2 ba. home. AU amenities. Lovely area, few steps to beach. $189,500 UJ>O ISLE Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den. 4 baths, hvlllg rm. w/ cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. suite/$224,950 BIG CANYON 4 BR, fam . rm .. 3 baths. Beautifully decorated Broadmoor PJan 3, on extra large lot. $325,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy\1de Orivt.>. NB b7S -b161 IALIOA PEMIM.. 5 Years young, duplex, up & 3 down; ocean s1d of blvd . Pride o owners hip property ; ~ood rental history . lil89,000 Including land! 673-3683 842-2253 ev~s associated BHOKEllS llEllL'l'ORS ll•H W &olboo b 11 )bh I ~NIGEL OAI L(Y & l\SSUCIAT ES BACK BAY 20211 lllCiHI' Ir C ... RJL Eastblu!fs best 4 bdrm l.Alsk built home. C.U for details on this beautiful home with low main- tenance which is near s hopping, schools, churches & transportation. c .. "'°"'''' $64,000 -Young co4ple gave this 3 bdrm home a touch of f amilY beauty. Now they must move. Best buy or Westwide! Oh, has detached garage · with guest room. C .. 146-4141 Serving Costa M esa-lrvmc: Huntington Beach -N e wport B each 1bopplns. Call now ! $88,000 DUPLEX Deluxe uniLS, golf course view. 3 Bedrms each, private, quiet. larae gara&es. Perfect retire- ment home and income. Call 540-1151 ·~.,_,, ... HERITAGE ' • REALTORS NORI NS REAL TY ..4 frplc '11. ceramic tile ing a tar~c workshop at ea rage. Call * 49 ... 057 k.itcherus &. bath. Pool & home. Bi&: separate PERFORM ..... CE ..,.. * spa. 875-4912 Broker bwldlog in back su.ttable "" __ C_D_M_C_OTT __ A_G_E __ , for mechanic, wood 847·3514 MlrPLI•o~Tl..._L PRICllSRIGHT worker, electrician, or --------""""..-''"" "' Pvt party, must sell one ??? Better hurry! Call 4 BR, frplc, very clean. 2 BR, 1 BA charmer. or two properties on 64S-03Q3. $'11.795. Approx 1550aq rt Live ln beautiful fronl F1ower Sl. In East C.M. l Owner o u t ot state. tmil, whlle building unit duplex or 1 lot w /2 960-4141. on rear of lot. Creal houses. 673-6372 FORESTE OLSON leverage. 10% Down OK. ---------• .. ............. .. OQ1y $134,SOO. 955-0350 Ji ( fHf' l l•H f f Jf'V11tl\t\,I • lHl\,l•U..,1, l•tVl1lH•IJl•1 Wldtn/fnnston .. •·~-~ . Eastslde Costa Mesa. 3·2 bedrm homes & room ror Prime Mesa Verde Home. more wilta. 300' deep JoL 4 Bedrooms. 2 baths, new Hurry·lola of potuti'-l pool & jacuzzi. Many Up· here! CaJIM&-5880. grades. Open Sunday. 2.873 Europa Dr. 557·2157 or 5'«>-2873. • ~HERITAGE . • REALTORS WALK TO SOUTH COAST PLAZA REA.LL Y ELEGANT For only S77,000. Lovelr, 4 Br & dlnlng rm, famtly rm, wp/fplc. Almost sq.ft. Top condition In out. Close to everythin&. Better hurry! Bkr. 894·5396 1 ••BY OWNER .Hunt'g Landmark adlt condo. 2 Br. 2 Ba, brand new epl, drpe. Call 548-4595. FIXER UPPER! 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba-$65,000 Close to Golden West College & shopplnl cen Lers. Open Sun 1·5 SO CALIFORNIA RLT\' 546-5606 red hill __ ,, ., 2 -7 :: 0 (l "'''"~~ Heewt'-Wt . .... ....... w. Honnflor W. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.. 2700 OAH. Y PIL.OT •---'~ ion .......... tOll .. -.. , .... , s.e'"'*• 107' ~·I .............................. u......,.a.c1 , .._..u.twW1:111ect u~ ~ ~__,,.....,, ... ¥9 •• ••••• •• .... • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• •••• ••• ••• • • ••••••••••• •••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••• • • .. t 100 NU~ FAIM ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• •••¥•••••••• IHVISTM'"T •• •••••••• ••• ••• ••••••• -T-__.. Al. .:, .. Mer 3222 IHclt l240 .. .,.. __ .,.,,__,..leech nn, Lingo Rl.JEmTt NIGUll SHOUS -J MctiJJ• 2 Miii lewdl1 11 ........ ... ... .. , • ....... ••• I ...... ,...., ... Mat.. •.• s10t.ooo. DANA POINT '91-881.2 495-1720 SOUTH l..AGUNA 499·4551 LAGUNA BEACH 497·2489 -.-1ulTY ~"91 '"'"-.--.Pr ~·JJit:· • ••••••••••••••••••••• • By OWNER VY",,._'"'" P••cb·cherr)'. Fully ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••\••••••••••••••• •--------- Thrn .ult• Medlc-1) JRlftl£X m•n•ced. Mu•t u11i---------1 WALK tu lle.uch, Pofll & GIO:AT VIEW of l •. i\. blthc. Ht'c.:plloo room, pu1l1l lnlereal. <{•11 5''f4il.ASS HILL SPACIOUS • tcM•!i Eimllng 2 awry~ lfaht.a • Hr, lurt rm, A <.' <.'un be rented It~ ~119 500 8312173 Fabulou1 ocean View 2 BR, 2 BA, 1~ •q (l bdrm., 1615 mu la a HVH MonltAO · M.in)' ~r •'I fl. Owner will -homo with 4 bdrms., + Adwl oriented c:omm. aimenltlt!1. $159,SOO or l'e>&ldl'r 1rude• & term.. ' RMI &test. bonua rrn + f mlJ Walk to 1olf, 1 ma to the bitth, •W'detek & •tr1um beltolr, C1tll 644·2601 $2.S2.:,00 4V3 0233 Ci<x> Eusts1d~ C0At1 b~ ZIOO ror only sio5 pt'r ~o~'. t>.:ach $423/mo. t..rst• homl' on WATEH Me11:.1 .tre11. Near 17th ••••••••••••••••••••••• Finl., llllll month'• rent NELSON R F.. 841"1303 with boat dock Z lltory Slreet. 3-Z Bedrm unit!., Would lake to trade lovvly mov• you In. Wiil leuse s·..i ., with 4 bdrm•. r11m rm. WATEK!''RONT·Ncwport 11tp. gur. Own!lr mu1l hom in coron1& Jbr ror OC'le OC' two )'UNI A vi•nlhlll'lll 3 br1 .. bn, din rm and pr1v<1cy Shore1, i o land, guden ~ •!lli aubmil ull om:r1. l~ba, Ira lam r.,;, frnt 1,...1 OPPottunlty to live t.err. view. All anullen. S13001molse & dt<tk overlook waler. Cal now. 00-7221. rm, din rm, kit, util rm It ll'I • ~ 000 home pool, Jacuul, 11u1na, utll LIDO NORD bt>il loca Cute 211.)12 Br home. cor· ~ lre yrd. Jn xlnt cond. • · rm. auto a1r1ae door. uon. Exrc 2 Bdrm, den • ntt Joe.. $1.55,000. 5'1H791 ,.1'\ Beat purl ur town for "75· mo. Opt. lo buy. din rm. Nt!w m & out. OwnenAJANtl " .. houe an CM, or Npt Wb76Morl4?-0T70 fTOO/mo tiO Ft. bayfront, 4 BR, den, p -ldefttfol Hh &44-3'02 R'ally neat, 3br, a b1& ON LIDO. Special Z p1~r.onPenl111ula. "" · RNlllatate w /fplc. cpt8, ft"nced bdrm+++ Glumoll?OUli MarshuU Rily 675·4600 ;~~~t~a&,; :u~' i_ '!:~a~ Wfftdff Realty W..ted 2900 yard. Kldtl /1>Ut OK. $f95. hideaway. $850/mo. NEWPORTBAY al$114,000.0WC2nd.Try lllcomftrape1t1 2400 ....................... ~.Aaent,noroo. ~~ ;~J<:i; ~·~u~oi:;: TOWERS CONDO 10•~0 down. 495·5906 by •••••••••••••••••••••••WANTED: Vo<:ant rlxer w /beautiful J ecor. lrviM I 044 On the Buy in Bulbou. lg owner. SAN CLIMEHTi upper'a, cull only Ir It's a 1 _______ .... ,.,..,.... 3244 f100/mol¥tl. ••••••••••·•-••••••••• t..Jynaltoch 1048 lBr, adults, pool, Four "'· ol(t trl-plex, re7a l fixer upper . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wa&...-4,-t .... --. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marina. boat slip. sel•uri· THI llST IM 3-2·2 in" iOQd rental area. ~ ·:IOW1 1 MeM 3224 Univ Pk Itk, 3 Dr 21.At BA. ...-.... -. -~. $158,500 WOULDYOU ty bldg. S99,500 Only$12'750e ••••••••••••••••••••• .. + bonui rm. Oxford, C ... 611-1400 Deane home-Unav. CONSIDER 0wnr/Agt67S-7S20 IUCHLIVIMG SERTHA0 HENRV' ..... SP!CIM. 1&!5.547·7044 :833·3315 --------Park "Kensmgton" m<ll llvang I lllock lo lhe ocie" ... 1!11110 ... y--I Unique, C'1lllom Ct.-d11r & REALTORS ·--•••••••••••••••••••• 5 Br 3 Ba hom Ir S V ~w w pool. Jacuzzi & air beach, with z Bdrms . :I '""""'"" ,.. redwood environment, 21SOelMar 41n.4121 ....._~ Opt i:l1on 10 UR TL E R 0 CK EA IK 3Br, a•i bu. Cslrn. pool deckina. 2250 buths. prnal'y. nice Lovely 3 BR. 2 bath uvcrlookang the San ••-••• .. •••••••••••••• coune. av · 12115· PRESIDENT HOME ram rm , Oceun vu, sq. rt. Mini blinds neighbors & flexible (umjshedbeachhouse Clemente CO<tSl. .. 6 Unit Apts. East1ide, U..,...leocJI 3141 lll85mo.M0-2511u Br 2 ba fam rm iite pool/tennl•. Security. thruout, Corning Cook terms'' Would you t•on 7106 W.OCEANf'RONT Bedrooms. 4 baths, C.M. $1680. Income.••••••••••••••••••••••• SPAClOUS3BrZBa, ya.id, comm pool, tennis a>?S/mo. 1213>430-3ti29 top stove, lw.h atrium. bider our O-y o for Only $277,000 sw1mmina pool; easy p1mo. Owner. 546-1773 2.BR, 1harp! $476 med yd, RV 1pace, fplc, crts. Xlnt neighborhood. H A ft 8 O R v t i-: w auto. i.prmklers & 1114·:. sa.s.soo. CAYWOOD w111ktopopularbeuches. TRIPLEX.C.M. 1450 mo. 549.0022 ; S650.Ph9SS-2088 MONACO wltb pnvua.. Ownr/Agl.54()..4646 MORINSREALTY REALTYIN<.: Ru1ll f or ramaly 3BRoceanfront$900 &&2--0550 Brand new upgraded courtyard. beaut1rull)" * 548-1290 * bvmg. $4e0,000 Great Eulslde Joe, d landscaped . Uprriu.11.!{l OHMYGOSH * 494-8057 * newer3br,2ba,frplc,yd 3BR,BlueLagoontlSO r<>OL&TIHHIS 2Br+ en, 2000 aq. fl thruoul Available for Fee land. New carpeting <2> 2br. lba, patios, encl 4 Br, Fam llm. 3 Ba eon· Town.home, top or hill. sale, tsciopt or rent ut just mstolled. Well locot BARGAIN gar $165.000. EmBay3BR.denS'750 do.L&epvtpt1llo.rec-rm, IC'mic vaew. 16SO. mo.+ S62S /mo. Owner/Agl ed.4BR .. 2'iba .. famrly =@= HU ...... ERS 3Morusrch8ayPJa.ia TomLee,Rllt',6'2·1603 etc. 1415. 6'13·7177; dep. No 1st & last. 759-06!9 rm. home, only SlO'J,950 "I Laguna Niguel EmBay 2 "den saso 631·1980 m.sm aft. 6 ·----------- Wow! Sparkling Newport 49'-7222 831·0836 Good Writ.Off! . TumerAuoc. Sharp 3 bedrm, 2 ba W~tc:liff Shopping 1m;a. Beach pool home. Ji-----~~~~ Great rental area. 2 Realton '94·1l?7 3~c«.lafe,pool,jacuni, w/fplc cpt.s Superarea' 2Br. 2ba, frplc, polio, m -~: ~-·:~·: CO"S,.Ll .... EVIEW Bdrm. ram. rm. & din. 11!-J Triplexes, 6 unit•. all .....___. .. h 3 diahwaa er,adulttonfy. Kldai pet ·oK $39S. pool. S425 /mo . call I?' ---,,_ ,, " rm. Beautiful carpets & .-.. uan 2Br,111ba.S235,000 ,_.,.r-, ac 169 84$-2491 · • · 844..SJ84or752·7799 dra""''S. Priced for a lasl r-istrClftO I 071 So. Call(. Realty ....................... . 963-4567 Atent,oo fee. -- ' --.._ • Spac1oui.311r,3bahomc "" _...,.. c•6.""""' NewBrookvie•.Coodo,JCORNER .. b ., b DeluxeBeochCondo.21••t: h 1 sale al SllS,950. Hurry! •••••••••••••••••••••• • "" "'YV" B 2 B i d ,. r ., a "' WOODBIUOG1'; wtl t' cgant large cnl.ry llS4 ON B CH r, "' a, a r con , • BR 2~~ Ba W/D pool CROSSING &wmdmi:sta1rwuy. Din-Ca 0-1151 4br, 2bu, tum wifrpcl. 1000/o TcoShetter EA . Vl EW or cpta drpe all majorap· Culver daJe. $425 mo. jac'sauna $.&so 55z4449' The Villut:e of Wood · mgareu.frplc&ample Great l'ounl.ry at· Buy2 housesonllotfo'r ~~c:~oNN~~· pins: Pvt'patlo, tennis, 714·546--0601 ' .C .. bridge. The best or both st.oragc.$149,500. ~i..~l~:erc . U4,250. !67,000 w/SOOO mo gro8s a r ~· r pool, jacuzzi. No .pets. Turtle Rock Campus $700 3 br ondo. Cls tu worlds. i\rchat'·t·turully DOLrHIHR.E. & .... .,.OOOassumableln.& home. Beauti fully $450 mo. Nr. S. Cou~l VI 3b i.rJ 11'1 et Falihlon ls lund. Short .. C_.' 494-858 W • I 098 -furn I 11 he d w I a 11 Plaza 540-8886 ew. r, a u • w term only. 759·00ti7 unique 2&3 bdrm ut--I 1---------•1 e1hnift1tH invest $10.000in 100% tax arnenllles. Beal China · bar, lndscpd, sprklr, titc. tuchcd & det<H·ht•d re i---------•I ---••••••••••••••••••••••• i.helter for 1977. Call Cove location $850/mo. ICIDSJPmOK Lovely, ready Jan\, SSSO sidences from S!l6,9!IO. HVH MONT EGO 4br, 2bll, Ht:Ht:'S YOUR CHANCE: C. P . A, 64 t·078.2 1 or ON LIDO. Eleaanl 2 Br E /Side 2 Bt., gar......... ~·~alln6<1s 5·~233 dya, 559-1161 fom rm. Ownr. 2015 Port Beaut ~I BR home, $2500 5.U-4054. ' ......., .....,.._ THESE/\ WALL Chelsea.640·1981 dn C:i ll now, 24 hr ---------1 with color TV, view & ~or675-8258 UNIVERS11'Y PAUK Village Ill 2200 i.q fl. detached home in xlnl Joe. 4 br highly upgraded lhrooul. Beaut. parqul'I llr 111 k1lch/fam rm, lll yd, beautifully lndscpcl $134,900. Ownr. 551 IGJ aft7PM ..:. $REWARD$ Out of town buyers 11ro ft:sslonal rcallor hu. over 40 home:. If> sh11~. all areas. "no prcs:.un• Prtn 1cw lo "buy rei.:ht ". •·all l'utr1rk 'l\·norc i\J.:l :>.}:! 1111. :l·I 111 ,, . ScpJratcs the ocean l"Y VIEW senicell4G 6879oi.:t 4·Townhouae four-plexes privat.beacb. '700/mo. 3 Br, 1 bath, cpt/drps. Wlllowa 4 bdrm, A/C, from this 2 BR. & den "" --m Costa Meaia. Reasona· w .. 11ftOllf Ho.es Washer/dryer. itove. S:JSS. homl'. 3 baths. Priv. de-2br. 2ba Mobile llome in Other Real Estate bJc. Agent. 645-1103 Cal 631-1400 Kida OK. M05ow. Ph Culverdale4 Bdrm, $435. vt•lor,men t of Blue exc I us1 ve Ba yin de ••••••••••••••••••••••• i---------.i ~5G8lor54G-l89J ~ch 4 Bdrm w /pool & I. a>: o on' r i n est I n Village. Dan. rm' den, MolMle "-• Huntington Beach. 2 blks ---------Jac. $SSS. l.a~una• $285,000 lndry. wet bar. Pool, ForSale 1100 ~t:>mhsoce~i •1un.i<~>: :J,> OMTHISAMD 2 Br, cpta. drps, kids ok, Doualas Correa Rltr, M1i.swn Ht•ally 494-0731 jacuzzi &. clbbse fac. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r e w, rp c, r Be.uttfuJ 3br 2ba dplx no dogs. $250/mo. &M-35l4 Bo t 8 1 i p av a a I bse w/ear. (l} 2br apt. • • • ._..., ..... u ---------• a l2x44' 1 Yr old Skyline, lrg, & l bacb unal. In· --·· DON'T MISS th1:. ncwt'r deluxe 3 BR, pool hm 111 l..J~una llalls. llltn )(as BH<l & fire ring. :\lJY \' \ OI tl'nl $115,000. ZOCJf"od1ky,ReoHOI' ·1!11~11 SiEl.500 ofr. 675-7903 good loc. Reas rent. come Sl200 mo. $200,000 . Pnct!d to sell. 548·7891. 536-2377 OCEAHVIEW COHDO, REDUCB> $THOUSANDS S Heduced for a ra:.l sale. Vacant & seller 1:. anx iol.lfl. Bcaul1ful 2 hr rnd unit w frplc. Community pool, sauna. & 1ucuu1 At this price al won't last! Hurry! Call 645·0303 Nwptlct.-CdM El Morro By The Seu Gorgeous 3 BR custom home f'untoi.lic loc. Your own pnvate beach, larnthl's wekome. Frplc, dbl lloor c-nlr>. anCI too much more lo mention. <LP8456 ) 540·5937 DUPLEX CORONA FINER HOME BIG CANYON. A1)11olule ly smashing August REDUCED California Par1r1c Mobile Home Really ---------•--"------"'---• Plan. A masterpiece RANCH REALTY 551-2000 NOW $71,850 JUSTLISnD! Immaculate 3 bdrm in ltnt-"l neighborhood : m.11ntcnoJncc rrec in:-.1dc & out. Lo~ of amcnit1ci. Unobslruclable caly, bench & ocean views. makes th1i. an xlnt buy al $188.500 FORESTE OLSON ·~C Uf l>••tln._, LEASE/OPTION ~EWPORT HEJGHTS John Saar agt, 546·2020 Quail Place Prop. DOVER VJLl~AGE 2br. 21.:?ba, frpl, dbl "ar Prin only 645·6081 So. Coast Plcnca ~wl•LMxwy Beauti(ul 4 Slitr Adult Park, w .all the amenities. This weeks best buy. 2 BR. 1973 Ben· dlx for only $21,900. See to believe. (8907X-U) 540 5937 CJhfom1a Bactrie Mobile Home Really Costa Met0/Hwpt lch $I 0 I. mo. rettt HILL TO, HIDEAWAY 2 BR, 2 Bu, 2 ca r We JUSl listed a n1c iiar carport. Beaut. home on Catalina Dr.,' Salemhouse Mobil e bdrms., family rm · Home in adult 4·Slar frplcs .. 2pall08&adeck. park Swim 'g pool. $149.900 J3CUltl &. scads or social For a 4 bedroom ram1ly m; . lt~~U>~ MARINERS COVE life. All ror only $19,950. home In Jrvmc'" Yes.~ 'l"S)-"""~~ REALTY 646-446 (KW8818)540·S937 1 d t h ~~uu u California Pacific ;!J'::°:V~ av0a111:bl~ ~~~. 499 ·2eoo HIR VIEW HOME Mobile Home Realty C..1~e lo schools, parki., Highly upgraded Carmel --.-and shopping. HETTf.:1 LOCJIMCINlguet 1052 3 br + fam. rm w/v1ew. 22x8 • Nwpt Bch park. HURRY ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• A fee land . $149,900. asklng $2750. Xlnt cond. A TIENTIOH 963-8377 BKR _P_P._64._5-6234 ___ _ RANCH REALTY 551-2000 SUPER BUY!! By Owner-llig Cunyo J4Ck,OTI! ADULTS!! Townhm. 2 Br. 2 ba, crpt, Z BR Beauty only $9,750. Beamed ceilings grace drps. SlS0,000. 833·0821 o <>utstanding value, lm- Wltelc'111 Rlt.L l~lllf( zzoo ••••••••••••••••••••••• h · l' 1 640-0700. mac. home. 1961 Great t e spacious iv ng room ---------fl Lakes 10x60, CSl313) of thi'I warm & cozy 2 I I /6 ACRE ~room planned unit. MIRRORS Hurry' Paciric Coaal • Truly immaculate & & WOOD Resoles Inc. yooi-8660 • PLACENTIA ni cely lundscllped Plus 8 multa·fareled ULTIMATE IN QUALITY Office bulldlnt aite with ~.SOC:> "51 VIEW in, all directions presllalous park an plans. Anexc1Ung Palermotha choice corn~r. 180 deg SI 49,000 will cause you to reach view. 1976 Royal Lancer. MIKE SAVAGE , for your pocket book! 1584 sq fl 60' patio REA.LESTATE Come and see -BU porch, cpt & tile. Rent 642•960 I I~' . 11 I ·,I 1ft• I. 11 .Kolaii . HOMEFINDERS Thousand• of Reoi.11 All areu all prices Sample: SJ.2S tbr h8e ltida/pell C!l602brct11ar pat.lo 1285 3br hse klda/peta LIFETIME SERVICE 557-0122 •••••••••••••••••••••• A 3 bedroom family home in lrvane wat beaullful landscaping, extensive uae of bnc and central all' cond1t1on ing. Convenient l school1, shoppmR nn freeway access. Aikin $74,500. SOON! S140. N San Diego Co. SOUTHCOAST . 114·743-2320 ___ ....._ ____ 1 I Id C•ff• Yrty. MlsaJ VI '-IHV. CO uns. l2x56 Jlillcrest. Nr FINISHED LOTS SZ35/mo. 49'-4.524 I fVI.,,.,,,, I /l,1~ f'•.1.-.1 b61 1161 k i1 JllhU °" •..., 1067 645-1103 Greennver golf course, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------t Corona. Lrg br, bltn 3 Br 2 Ba. carpel, drps. 8 alb o a ocean r r on wshr/dryr, aiarbage dis· Pllllo, lnd11cpd, fncd. dramatic d uplex. 4& psi Spc rent $139.SO. Woodbrtdte 2 Br + den, ba. Broadmoo w/atrlum. cor. nr lake. pools, It t.ent1is. $107 ,000. I 551-0685 bcuut \icw. 547·MSO or 8JO 3725 ------· Mewport hod9 I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TREAT YOURSELF WOULD 1,.Quai~I You BelieYe Iii. I Place a 2 bdrm., 2 ba. lo Irvine Prop~~ for under 160.000. We MOO QUAIUt. Nl ICACH h.ave a lovely D·Model ln -------- Walnut Square that hM MEW LISTIMG been ta•t.trw ly dttoral· This charming 3 BR 2 ed. nu. I• • must 1 BA, 2 rrptc home on v~ry before d ecldtna preati1lou1 street anyt)\ln1tl • w/park·Uke setting. Thta home I.a read)' ror yolir Chrl1tmaa Clft. llOD,900. 54~3666 tllfllOlc-»in .. I " l ' ... I ~ ' • ,, dramatic design with u surpassed golC coune view! 3 BR. & den. ........ _;..._ ______ , $795/Month -------• HASTIHGS&CO."' RUl.TottS 640-5560 W4TUVIEW 2,'!:;CeJa;a'rd: f:i~~·!~'. 't523CAMPUs~IRYIHE Blutra condo, 3 BR, 2 ba, S48-7596 11---------1 xlnt cond. ~Mo. ----------111.GE bouae or High A1enl644·1133 3Br, IV, Ba, freshly paint· School,1mall yard,2Br2•--_...;-------.... NWPT. Shores, walk to ---------1 bc:h, no pet.I. 2 br, den, 2 ---------• ba 54115. 548•3657 WA'OCHFORmE DAlLYPILOf CHRISTMAS TREE TINMIS 'HACH. .. 3 Br 2 Ba, Newport Shor es home, newt,. painted le decor'd. ~ ' . Merry Christmas lim Forsyth MO¥ an. ~1ng year bftt\Q yoy many Happy M•mori" .... love.. ~ Q.. " f .~~°" r:-t=" v~.<t.J. o • : . ... :Bl-:ACH, View, Pier, 2 Br. $450, l Br $375, $325 Adlts, utll pd. 303 E ' eewuter. (l) 871 ·2866. -u••h ··-"'ii t--\" W.'" worll.lnf •"4 • ' 0 :.. .. lliltOl "' °"'" VilJ '"l:l!.\SiMMJ: An4 1Hl"f 011r •••7 • r.r oul' • I 0.f lo -Jt>. ,, .. , ,. ... :r. .u " • u ..... Yn11•U •9¥ •• LD\JE "Wlll JOU ~ •Snot~ I'll ••7• --raa.• '/OV! And oft "'• 'll 10 To 0• f'lll&llJ And all that. 1novJ ~ Otets"MIS· We knaw the Al'WJ Ila• ••d• 7011 wa!t , T.o. \~1.L.\I (lur; don't 1011 dar• H.11• TKll 4attlll\l ' fJ I J.a•e 61 a1Ha• tz>• all. Hlrr1 X-ma•··· .,_~,.._ j. • • • • • f HAPPY HOLIDAYS To au of my tam.Uy ID M1.11ke1on, MldlJ&an. God me.t You All Love. Pat MERRY CHRISTMAS . J hTi Cllillda bu a 100 Chrl1tmu for • you! Taite care. aod lie Cood tidal! HOIHOIHOl • ~IDf Pat 1101 Wntclff Dr. Newport l'lD&DOlal ctr Lnl ... OHIUS,.. Call oa stte lluaaer Cn4> ..um utMt DILUXIOMCIS OOmm1 • 1ndliU 1pacea, AwlUf Pem Youf' on• • only 1ra~ddau1bter 1end1 an her love and klut11 IOf' the belt Cbriatmas ..,.,. MO..Lo•• Dave, lolise Skeeter & Kevin I MERRY CHRISTMAS TO 1'HA T-o\D" GAHG ~MIHIOHTHI I PBHMSULA POINT Lo••ff'om L..-olM lufflnc)tOft RELAXING MASSAGE Bob.lamea-1Jc Maueur Oukall f.9, 49!-SUl I I • s Ii. l ... • •es• •• • .,. s.nu ....... • • 1 7 H1•tc1e••1 a...c..... ~I'••,.. ,.,....,..,, '-I ,.. .._ ........................................ ,,., ••••••••••••••••••••••• .............................................. ·······••·•r ........... • • ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••···· ••••••••••••••••••••••· Bia' Al!PUath:• r~. Iba will lay )'9Urt El.ECTlUCAL SIRVJClt ploader. I>Ump trUck. SUMSHIM• GllLS Walls, pall0t new lawOJ, PETER8 PAINTING YOUNG MAN. I Jl'I expr E ft A M I C t l I • . TJUPC11ARG 110 or miH. epalu16 CALLSS15hr.•SMALL Haulln1. tree work, AJlt)'pnotbome•olll~ orkltu, Iron work. Expr'd. Ru• R•tea, ln wallcoverin1 .• Free NowmmodcJ. l"rM ut~ ZOZSS.Maui.S.A cklullnacoo! Guuwork .JOBSMa-12'33 ~adln1, d•mo etc cleanln1 packaau. fouolalne. Licenaed PrH Eal. Cell Geo •ta.t4.S.&STIA.ndy amt Joba welcome, ~ ~70189 al. bf.I aavtqa. net N•48Ktrl .J..2S7 Speel&!As>W"R.Ework. 07~ ~ Prof palntera • S31-JUSaftS. ca,..... cwt.MWt41 UclZlat"' 845~.14 tf ' f" Bouded/lnaW'ed Free Tree a, ~!ant' trtm or ro· PROFESSIONAL Paint· papjrhan1tn1. Clean, Trw~ •"•••••••••••••••••••• Cd.n., ••••••••••••••••••••••• =~~~~N•ce. IDOVa. Roto-to&I, tprtllr lftl. Inter/Exler. Reu, peat, wo~:'~i Fr•at ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOORS. wtndowa , ••••••••••••••••••••••• ELEC'l'RJCJAN·Prleed OCC Student. 8!1 .,. T rpr. lawn reaov/hllt wort1uarM2-G38i 11157.-0, Removala, trimmlDJ!• c. bin. l I . I h c Iv• 11 For the open 1ur affair. All r•ht·f~te eatlmato Ola t('uek. Traah, tr•• \rim, HM malotenance clean· ~ FaJr Pric:ee. St.ate lie" In· ........ /1..... onurlna. l"rct .. i. We ct. Rough/finish. Plc:kup occulon p1:1raon•I ~:JroalJJoti:.;.," ..... etc;.J!aody fU·ST03, '"'•yd wk, am fl 11. M•all'W aw-. Eld.er\or •Pffl•Uil. ,,_ ..... ;:--.. ;; ......... lullylnsuredf42.m. work.842-6783 11ttV1ce. Cabana Cate~ .._....., 549--owo equip, dependable, •••• .. ••••• .. •••••••••• Tryme-CaUcote~ VUYNBAT.PATCU • ......_ ....... IRot145na1t• 'Cl reter, fnte ell. H.8 . JOBS T·~· ...,.._......, Decltin& rem0dello1, re· .... .._.., 843·1205/148-4031 Br1ckwork. Small Joba. PalnUnti', Extr/Jot.r. Ex· • ..-a .... ftE •••••••••••••••-••••• pair. No Job too 11mau. c:.....t/~ •••••••u••u•••••••"• tto..cs..Mg New~ Coat.a Meaa " pr'd tfOoeat nut. reu Flee•&. 813·1'3!1 $1eepera SOO. Std sofas &limittes. Ev~11675·4697 •••••••••••••••••••••••Dig It Laodktpc Main·••••••••••••••••••••••• SIUPSHAPE lrvtne.11r1~317~ave1. Uc'deet·loUDave . PAn:HPLASTERING Sl2t, moat cbra f75--CEMENT WORK All t.enance: Mow Ii Edge. Want a Rl!:ALLY CLEAN Expert. experienced Mo ._ lubor. Varlet)' fabrlcb. C..,.t Senlce klnda · •·uu malnt, baulto1, HOUSE? CaJJ Gln1ham boustcleanlng done on a ,.!· .... • towrtOt", eictertor paint· ~•mal lt!,P,..~111 :.~l,.!.! e Howard•• C • t m ....................... . Reaaonable. Free clean·up1, rotolllllng. Girl. f)' etl645·5123 weekly or bl-wkly basia •• MO·VIN·· G·:~HA···:~······ l n e . s u p r • m 0 WU -· -~ Upholatry761-010IS esta. Call 75<HJ625 l''ree Est. 675-5518 ee Gen'l cleantni. wallis, • u.ulNG worJunansbJp. C.U Jad" *"' WeCareCar~tCleaner ce ment w 0 r k . I MM AC UL AT E window. waxloa. Also LocaUdon1dl1lanco flGl.78$4 ....................... WatertM• Steam clean 8 or 1ham Drl veways patios Japaneie 1ardenlog CLE AN ING · Y 0 U rentai. 4c boldiday 1 time ~or83&-571S8 ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• I b • • aervtce Tree trim clean DESERVE OUR BEST 1-clals. Reas. Honest • Aeoustic Cini• shot, In· HOMESAVER.S. Plumb-Pl n • 4c So 1 l d 0 a le poo II so up olstery.ul walkwtAys. Reasonable, up H It . I . rates " free est.a Ellen 'Two Men wm Move tr/Extr SlncfaJr Ot' J>uon """ JleaUn.1. Free est, wa.tetbedl C.Omplete line: workguar.Truckmounl treeeat.s.s.56·0757 tnchcp'&~.14~· am 79-0377 9118-4!43 • You" We bandit bll F.dwatdlProd.R.C.Con· SlObr.Honestfsrellable Ci acc. Reasonable. unit. 1''r eat, reaa rat GeMr.efl!~1c" Uptbou.eclearun1done move a. Office Ii tr.~75J.17f7 ten1ice. BolA. M/C OK. Terry'• N1Vpt·Bay 6'5-Jll& Cofttrador _.....,,. by expr'd German lady. Wlll clean your ~ or houaebold, dlatanc• 6 7M-!l.50or&CT.o383 8'2-0161 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlntref•. $Sbr. 54&-4881 ape. Esper & reliable local, also packin1. PROFESSIONALPJJEP 1......_ •--------~· MARK SILER CONST. HANDYMAN : Carpentry, · w/ref'a.$4,00hr.SU·3531 Lowet&l lecal Tate. Uc· '6PAINTING EXTER. •=~~••••••••••••••• Shampoo 4' steam clean Newconst. Res/comm'!. electrieal. p!umblntt • HOUSE MOUSE d/imtd. Cai T nu ..... Reu/lnar. lJc. 238741. J\00 '° c.olor bn1btenera; whl Rmadd,remodel.Palio noors.Ph847·2787 QUALITY Serv. w /a MllCl-s . Pb84'7·1'2'78 Freeeat.638·7394 I FS 0 RLESS II cptalOOlln bleach. Ch~u Uccootr.call979-4411 IOO IT AU "Personal Touch". SIUP/SHAPE HAVE VAN Wi11 mov CUSTOM PAINTERS ~·~·llc/=-~·~vul ' hv, din rm, ball $15. Ava CaU &t2 Ref'1. Call: Pam 536·9522 A complete cleanine Ellpr'd, Uc:d. cau ,;; "WedottaU" ir. ~cltJiaia dlJcn~: rrn S7.50. c<?uch no, chr Drffamoldftg -4~7 service. Windows a fint645•6641 Uc.2eHOO 5'5-53C7 ~anytime S5. Ouar elim pet odor ••••••••••••••••••••••• FRH I HRLAIOR ~laity. Minor repairs.---------•-------~---~-----• Cpt repair. 15 yrs expr DRESSMAKIN9. 24 hr ror members. All SpcsidieqCleanl ree estimates. Call uallled Ada aell bll PainUD£ Homes tntr It rr1 • Dally Pilot ~_:ig{k myself. Reff service. N0Uu111 over Services SlO hr or less Wind.ow&, walJ, etc. Mr. <7lOS4l..(Sll item1, aroall item• or Exterlor. Specialty : Clasalned Ad to buy, aell · 125. 960-3836 673-5013 L.Ynn960-5844,536-77ll WantAdR.eslllt.s 642·5678 anyltem.642-5678. Apta.lora•Al·250I orre:ntaomethln1. 11 WAn::HJIORntE DAILYPlWJ' OiJUSTMAS TREE EVERY11ru"5DAY a .. HlfltW..tM 7100....,W9'h4 7 100 tfpWuted 7100 ..... c.cM IOIOffhet.Y• 1041-._W. .... , ..•.......•.. ~···· ··············~········ .•..................•.....•.•...............•.•................•••... C4• DAA.Y PLor TWlffl· • 1m IOSI HllpW..._. 1100 .... W..W 11o;.w,w_.... . SHlr~EJVIHG TYPlST/Rec«Jpt. Pltlme UlT G 1-: American MOVING SALE1 231 Sfcl£T1Di£S Va d CtiUt. drtvera Ile., for N8 Syna1oaue, to to retri1, thru th door. \ a Yr old Ookko Rot. Lab. Luionla, ~CwPt Snorta . ...••....•............. ............................................. . ~~ '°"'*"" i J :-Ju(t '\I.Ill l~·nc•lll., 111 1•lud1n1t :..tl'k )\\' u ,1yv1c "' cu11\ ;w:1!) Thunn. l '\t u-1;.i :!.Ill) ~ ur .. o l. \I 'Ii I ull l 111w 1 3 JU 'li u1 M'' ;udl•. full lllnt' 1 .I JU \1>j1l)' .1t l'artl l.uJo l 'on\ ,1h·,1·1·nt 1 ·enttr ur' .. 111»2 xt>J t NUASlS A IDES & ORDBLIES "i1:1·1kd lo 1(1\1• ll•nl11·1 luv1nto: 1·1.1rc to tilt' cll11·rl) puta•ntt. Wa ll t r.1111 1111alll1cd pcrsonnl'I f':urn whlfr you lc111 11 /\II ... h1rts av.iii 1\ppl~ 111:. S11f11.•r1or N U O fflCE HELP 1'1•r111 JJ t1m<· :'>t.111111• c;ovd tn11st 1-:xix·r'1t 1111 h \pph• 19tl:! l'hJrl1• St l'\I Opticaf Lob Tme 1)1\ of IJri.:c 1·uq1 \1111 h1•11d1b h 11; 0'.!06 1 )1 dt•r cfrsk rcccpl "11ml \\It h numlx·rs, \\t1rk111J.t "'11 h 1·ustoml•r'>. 111-.11 ,\ pll•••'>1111t lt'h·phu111 111 .. 111 111·rs :, IO 1111 UAL lSTATI ••o••s a A.LU w l' have W\ opening ror two men with l'l\pcraence in commerciul & lnvest· ment propt.U"lHts. We11ley N. Taylor Co. 1~ J 32-ycur·old firm ownld & operated by it~ founder We are not a sub· ~•d1 ur y, div1 s ton or brunch of ~orn~Uun~ else JUSl headquarters. \pphcunt,i, must p05sess highest pro- J l·i.sional qualitie~ & integraty to mut<·h our own. Interview by appoint· mc.>nl only , WH LIY H. TAYLOR CO .. UALTORS-, 2111 S• ,,_...,. Hll& IMd MEW PORT CENTll, H.I. 644--4910 Heip Wanhd 71 00 Help Wanted 7 I 00 •·····•••••••·········· .................•..... RA TE CLERk H ~ t 1 rt: I.I ll 11 n d y m a n tu ll•ui 11 1 utl':i fo't cijthl needed ror l'leanmg lt,11 kl!ruuntl helpful ''""' ma ml or pre 11chool fll} an JX!r•;on l'<1hforn1a 552-7\!H 1•11-:i.:>hulk 11001 M1cu RM I t-7,P/tlme M Saotu 1-°l• Spring~ M<'l>a Verdt' Conv llu!lp. REALESTATE ~~5~t!nter S t . CM l'111fc ... bton:d l11·cn:.ctl l ~ali•sJJt't1JJll' want1·cl to SALES nnnpl1•te ufftl"c i.tufl SUPPLE E T <'•11rt JHILl'r11cd las trni.:s M M i.:t·o1•ruu:. l"omm1~:,111n~ YOUR INCOME \d1<11\l'l' truanm~ CJll S$SS SSSS r111 11m oJte ant en ac·"' PA.RT TIME 642·5062 TELEPHOMI WORK Century 2 1 C rocker HOUSE.WIVES 62 1 W. 19th St., CM I COLLEGE STUDEtnS Ml! fortltlt ~prr Prefrr ex 4. )f.to" Cal1M4'199t , "w•tcr, S700. 844·1084 SolA,Yed. Tl'alned. GeoUe. Antiques. hlna. Furn UY Ni!eilC!dNow! ptr Jl\&l{IUIU warehou.s Xlot tamilydo«. 912418$7 SW:l. lo-.4 •<>Pfn,•30aim~:31Jpm lnat uper1.1UC1n OJ'. m1l1Wry TYPIST /llCIPT. Seara 21, c:. Ct ref di 1r.-.ia..;..... IOI O J_,,,_a,,,w ______ l_O_J_O. •C.U£\.enlnaL1U318&2 aupply •~per. vary Atl'ur typlat Min oo freezer, 1cernakcr SW ~ •-... , Fur 1wln1 tt1nivty11rd btofpful.. #\pply, Nallonul wpm. Good ofc ik'IU.. by side Supermart Cop ••••••••••••••••••-••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •MOHIS Hy1tum1 Corp., 061 5<&9-1767. pertone. Sl4&.643·482l STORBWlDESALE WA.~ED \"l'h •-i'h • h 50 Blrch St, N 1:1. <Near oc; ---New • Uled tum, appl'a, , .. ' <» w • 0"~ 11 ·\l~ro EOE WullrH1. Apply. Sid's misc. Wll.9on'a Baraaln TOP CA~Jt DOLLAR wpm lti~m ~to~~ Jona "".,., Blue: Beet. 107 211t Pl, Auction 10 ti Nook. M5 £t 81' W. 19th, PA ID F 0 R Y 0 UR Silk screen proct1as N 8 lnperaonaft3pm. .,.••••••••••••••••••••• CM.M2·793C>4•5484282 J£WELRY, WATCHES, pnntl!r Gt"nt'rul <'yhnder Fountain Valley Police ART OBJECTS, GOLD, uuto dl.'c11l c~p 40 hrs 4 WAllHOUSE OFC Aucl.Wn Sul ~c 10th O<>ld v,lnyl aofa MG. Twin Sl LV ER SE' VICE. duy week & bt•neflts MalW'e man !or Inti co lOam l 0200 Sl ale~ bed with frame $15. F INE 1"URN & AN· OruniieCounty 979·7660 wtsmall but busy 18le11 Avenue &45-l105 ___ TJQUES. 84$-2200 Soff ftor.ll warehouse In HD , -')'llOMASVILLE 6Pc U•ntock 1075 o~ , 'Ml'u HAfn ... l p c ecept. responsible !or opera~.: .Bedrm suite lnchad 6\.11 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Laguna· El 'foro Art:a small machinery, ship llcyclet 1020 · nlM 540·4455 Full time Mature pcr11on pmg, order taklna. lit-0 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1t.rmu1re. Over $2000 auw. llet1 torean mare. broke Equal Oppor Employer pref. 83'1·3800 typing. Must have ftOJDe GIRLS 20 .. 3 apd with JU Muat sdl Sl250. 5ST·'7m to ride & drl ve, blk --~-=----l·---------I or c back i r 0 u n d & R i 1 e Ha d 1 e bar 8 or -tl35•03U paitur no. parado Moraan ifllldina. SECRETARIES & TYPISTS Be prepared ror the up· Coming holidays, earo top SSS on temporary &s· S1gnmenb Wllb oUice overload Qill today for 1mmedlate placement ~o~ ott(ce • ~OJ overl oad 5 57-0061 3723 Birch St, NB Sr. Typist Needed lmmcdiatoty Long & •hort turm as· signmcnts Holiday & vac<i tlon pa y llos pltall"allon phtn a\•llllable. VOLT fLflw•t.._A4A..,W '-' tt't/• f •• mechanical aptitude. banana -oea~ x1nt cood'. 9412. -Eni;, Wuterl\ (t14J 1163-8442 S2S. 831-2551 'aft G wkdya CLOSIOUT SALE ~1 WAITRESSES anyUmewknds Over atocked coffee ModMMty 1078 • ftbl.... ·"holesale •-UI\ •••••••••••••••••••••• • EJ(per'd Dinner House Woman's 3 speed blcyclt ... ...... .. .,. • .. .. Bwiboys & Dashwashers . 14(). Motorcrost bicycl der, soras & hldeabedt Lathe WUaon 19GO 11 .. x24 .. Apr.ly m person, Mon· SM 64.5-1705 from Sl&.5, Game tables, Sl.JOO. Meuser ao x63 Fr 2-4pm The Coach --$385, quality merchan· $3,200. Pl'e11 brake 50 H~ Inn llU? Camino BICYCLE SALE 15-20'~ dlse at low prices, start.I loo. 72" $5,000. Cincin Capist;ano SJC offallG1tane&Vlscount Sat . 9 SPM. The natl Horh:ontal mill <Esplanade Pla'za neu~ In stoi:k Two Wheel F\arniturc Connectioa, Sl,800. (213) 961·3434 thealrportJ Transit Authoraty 318 73SlHeU.•L, Huntlng\On Main St Hntg lic:h Beach. M2·1UC Women to wrk in sml 536·00.IO Guest Home. Lag Nlg -- --*•I BUY** Live in. 25042 Monte Ladles 3-specd bike, new Verde. paint S25. Boy 's bicycle. Good used Fumilurc & approx 20'', new paint & Appllances--Olt l will eoao ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED 3841 CClftll*I Dr+~• 546·4741 (Across l''rom Orange Co. A1rport1 Equal Oppor Employer l~~~~------~-----.-.----.-.•IM..-chaftdiN seat. ~·1705 sell or SELL ror You. MASTERS AUCTIOH CllUIS~R. 1941 Shelby, 646-1616 & 83l·'6Z5 Spnnger front. must see i--------- TOP CASH DOLLAR PAID ··on YOUR JEWELRY, WATCHES. ART OBJECfS, GOLD. SILVER SERVICE. FINE FURN. & AN· TIQU&4i. 645-2200 S.C,..fary--4-ool Switchboard Operators, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Strong typing & sh start p lime. Will train ~ 1005 abiht1es nee Apply in Superior Answering ••••••••••••••••••••••• person to Mr Fui:ntcs, St.>r\•ice. 250 Jo: 11th St. Persian magnificent Robert Bein. William Stel.C.!'\I <upstairs> Sarouk , circa 1930 Also, 10 spd. 520. 54lM407 CA.SKPAlD For gd used rum, an\1· qucs & clr TV'a, 957..Sl33PhooeU ----cs-courae.---24-tt-· lk.11 t::-;tJlC S..ikl> l'l'Oflll' 1';1rt Full 1'11m· tu kl· or '' ..1ntC'd lJµ to !IO lU': tll'I''-& m.tkl' dl!11vcnl'" 1·omm spltt Nwpt Brh 1\q.( SS~ Jll'r hr ~11!.I liJI ll'JllO h.111· rl'laabll' t'Uf' & l'.11 htng ,1\ll•ndl'llb \ ,111'1 I' ta mt' "'kncb & ,., , . ., \lu't hJ1 c Calli tJ rl\ t•r' hccn:.c S2 65 Jlt'f hr ~ lll'rt·ent;1i.:1· 111 IIµ<; !'JJI ti7:1'Hlil I .1ltl0I 11'\I lur . 1ppl Guarunteed Ho urly Wage Plus tionUf. 5:30 pm to 11 .30 pm. Cull &IG \223 or come to 250 E 17Lh St. Costa Mt!sa . Frost & Assoc., 1401 TECH .... ICI;.... 12x24 ', mint <'Ond . Quail St. N. ll. " __ ,... Gorgeous gem colon CHRISTMAS SPECIALS 1950 Wizard motorbed SECRETARY Electronic lnstrumentu Pvt pty. 805/484·2286 tlon l''irm net.'<ls analog _ bik e, completely Newport Cenlel' Law firm. Some legal cxpr pref. b14t might consider tru1nee. I ntelli.:ence, shorthand & typing re qwred Call Ruth Brazer 644·2071 tcchn1eian to cover PUii.iC "UCTIOH Western Slate out of new MANY IT.lt!MS OF FlNF: rl!lttored. Many more an· tique & crui11er bikes. See al the Pedal Pusher Bike Shop. Npt Bch. 67S.2S70 "Ii !t. Ions custom padded portable bar with multiplex tuner, 8 track & l'Umtable-all are built· ins·plua two custom wrought Iron bar st.ooU. Sharp! 581-7446. cords & viaual ald book. Child teaches self $35. F o l ded boxea f or Cbrlstmas allts, candy or cookies, white, 2'A de· ep 95/8 loni M/8 wide, lOc ea or 31'25o. 642·3379 ph1H11· Wt• I ram ( "ull '!'111· Receptionist to SBSO I· u 111• 1 Bru s It 1 11 t·'n·t· lk-uut1ru1 new ofrs • ,1 filil 11 ultl l"•lub. 1·11 Xlnl PA.RT TIME EYEHIMG MGR. lk·n., I .01 t'I~ ... urround mi.:s \OU nvvtl J'lllSC & ,1tt1 ,ll'(I\ l' JJ• f!>UllJl l!y & .1 rn.11u11• Jtl It ude Ca II HttJ ~-..JO f~S l\lor;o Fl'l' Johs l"ou~tJI 1'1•1 sonnet AJ.wnn :!WO llurl>or. C M 1i:1 "'eek Ot1ll(Olni.:. 1·11 1husiasl11 vcr,,onuhl~ \\ur\..1ng "'Ith )oulh 'lu-.l ht• ma:!~ & ht111· J ii 1• I' l' n cl ti t. I t· 1· u r. °"u()l.'rv1 ... 111i: adults & rar l~cnpllum:.l full tame, m•rs. 1\laalabk t'll' & ~ew~rt llcacb RE of· Salurd.ivs 1)1:! 1:1:!1, l•'(t f11·e Uood lypmg & xlnt ~>. hcl~t·cn l :, l'~t t\:.k ,q1p1•aram·~ l,ndustraal for .Jim llrokers, ICIJ 1!~1 l' \!:iT 1-:l' 1' Arltsl "'.11111•11 Exp pn•f'cl •>r \Oo lll traan F llml' Pl" Co hcm·r1h \ppl\' l'l.'nm !>Jll'r llif I 'IJ!'l'nll.1 \\I' ( ''1 RECEPT /TYPIST :\tu.'l hu11c fronl uf<· JP Pl'Jr . l(OOd t ypanR & )Jhonl.' skills Sl'C /\ndy l.ucach. Dar of Sul~:. HlWPORTtR IMH 11117 J.1mborl'c Hd. NB WJnl l•l w11rk da) .... 1ftl'r Eq11JI Oppor f:mplovcr mion'> & l'\ t•n111 g.., in "-II • PBX Answer Serv. ,\ t'd:'>1 Jn· ..... ., Wufl.. R. E. SALES I l t ITil' 11r p l Im t• \'1111111( t')(C('Ull\'('' In Wt·t•kench .. 1 must Xtra t·1111111wn·iu l n•al cstall' pay f o 1· 1· " p 1• r · d farm :wck tramcP for 0111.•rnlur-.. ( .tll lilO OKI:! t"omrn1•rl'lal real estate. E 0 E I Yl·ttr 1·-crwr1l·n<·c 111 r<'al SALES Are you un art111llc. l'r cu111<". e n 11q~et1t· person whu likcll thing:. sparkhnt:. lakl'S to dean. h;.as sall•s ability" Lido \'1llaRe·s leadmi: Jeweler "'1V.es Cull or p tame m duct Sat No ntRhts Ca II 673·9J.3.l *SALES CLERK* Inside sales, f/lame . YtJar around pos 11.B. store Kxpl•r helpful X.lnl l'O. bcnollts. APPLY IN PEHSON GENl!:R/\LOfo'fo'ICt-: l'Al.M STATIONERS INC Jt»1 S llarbor Jllvd FULLEllTO:-. Orange County location ESTATE JEWELRY, Salary plus over tlmt'. AHT OBJECTS. AN· Membership University Athletic CJub, Nwpt Bch. 1371. Save $$."'1· 1"3-4881 auto. & expenses. fo'ull TIQUF.S. FINE FUkN , Wldlnc) Mot.,;ols 80JS Medit cabinet Sl.50, bar, c·ompany benefits rn ~'TC. PHONF. FOH JN-••••••••••••••••••••••• lrg mirror. rocker , dustry leader Goo FO & BROCHURE Used 4xlS" wood planks, dresser . Art Spm, employees Ma,or pro· ~2200 1300 Im ft, will sac: $.SOO. 645-785_7 ______ PAINTINGS.Artist needs SECRETARY/Exec doct is machinery pro·1--~-.-;. ..... -.-.-;.-.-;.-.-.--i G73·0135 days, C\'es cw cua tom made cash. BIG SAVINGS' Rcq f time "' top or tection o r centrifugal MUSIC IOXES 992.5030 wrought Iron barkart Gallery Quality Palnt-ganizat1onal '>kllll; to run rotatin~ equi pment . h · lo .. 45 "-u••«••"" St-nd resume to Field CLOCKS c-• wit Z glass shelves & 8 tnp -·.,.. .....,._ busy ofc Qual : non· _._..... bottle holders ·S75; smoker,xlntl)pe,S II& Semce Manager. 17931 Slot Machines, N1ckelo· Equipment 1030 Jlla,hback casual chair WGGAGITAGS dictating m.ach ability Skypark Blvd. Swte !!:. deons, phonographs . ••••••••••••••••••••••• <needs recoverin&)-$3S. from your bualnesscard. Gd ph m unncr Xlnt lrl'ine,CA.92714 World's largest &elec· Beseler 45 MXD color Call&U-0138. Send one card for each work cond. Send r115umc Sal4t t 1 on . A l so g if t s . head enlarger + access. tag plus one apare: We incl'g !ialury lo P.OBox Tel~ ' furniture, antiques. $1000orbe\ofr.842·6234 FA.2pesectlt,6'ea,tie return perm a n ently 2953, Nwpt Bch, 92663 Want to make money? Amencan International; dyo terry gm/yel/ or· sealed attractive tag & Can you sell on the 1802 Kettering; Irvine. Olympus OM ·l und g/wht.Gdcood.Xlntfor s\rap, meeting airline SKretary /lkklM' phone? Top$ In our busl· 754-lm. Open Wed.·Sat. Vlvlt.ar Oash #252 wicar· !am·rm or apt. $125. I.D.' requirements. Pre· N B. ad agency. Pfiones, ness. 646·3030, ask !or ryuig case. $200. 831·7214 831-2551aft.6 wkdys vent loss & thel\ 1 For a some typing, & balhngs Ray. _, ___ S_AL_ES____ ""rsonaUzed ta• encl~ 5700 10 start + benefits ---Comp darkroom outfit. WANTKO: Major ap· ..... • lmm~d •'P"nln" Call ---------i Pnm1t1\•e arts & Anti Omega 1-;olarger , color pl.iances, working or out. wallpaper, fabric or :,15 Sink: ;.IO Ol ll for TelephoneSales ques from Mrica, In and B&W head plus Also, used furniture. we "Day Glo" paper~ we ·-------------•! appt HOUSEWIVES dones1a. China. Europe lenses pay cash promptly. wlll back & trim your ,. S $ $ $ S S S S S S $ & New Guinen from my carriers. color drum 897-8460 tags. Or try two cards SEC: It fo~T AH Y Bright Fall is here & althoul!h it pnVJlt! collecuon al the trays. tnnks, Jillecs -------back to back. ELECTRONIC future for lmJ.?ht. :,harp may be early, ll'a lime to Anthropos West Corp., safehght, much more N BEDS, xtra long $! r,~CES: gal w 1 gd l ypi nl(. startmaking somcextra 3402·A W. MacArthur $325 or best o ffer matt, sturdy, w/padded eaor ORGAN SA.LES Shorthand skills Our cash for CHRISTMAS <Uetwecn Hurbor & 968-4883 bookshelf on back. 4/Stap$1.60ea. II I G II F: ST co M . secretancs have a r e· Tlme·Lifc Libraries has 1''airvicw ), Santa Ana. ---1 Perfect for child's room 6/9tags Sl.50ea. MISSION 1 GU,\ RAN · cord of quick udvancemt the flnesl & one of Ole December GUI lhru 10th Dogs ' 8040 or J(uest rm. $25. ea. lO°Satn:';!·t!ci!dect SALES eslal<· :.ales required ----------f' r I \ ,1 t l' n f f I (' (' • PIX OPERA TOR :. l'l' r ct J 1 ~ . cl r a "' & T E E / fo' R I N G 1:: to top positions in them most profitable p/timc from 10 A .M. to 8 P.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 831·2551 BENEFITS. Sell m h1~h \'estment Cidd <.:;ill Jobs avail. We offer 3 (Xie piece or the whole DOGTRAINlNG _&_c_d-re_s_s-er-.-w-/-m-ir_r_o_r, NOCARD? tramc :,hopping malls 759·1511. :Otn. <.;aro for shirts per day to flt. Into colle<'lioo. Your Place or Mine antique, dark wood. xlnt ~~. Ya~r!:°. ~ I' 11m<' 1-:xpt>r. n1·1 IK•ndah Cull Some ab1hty to play the '78 position your sehedule. a bnsc __ Dc_a_l_e_rs_W_el_co_m_e __ John Martin 548-0059 cood. $115torr. 642·5693 we'll make one r.;d'Per l)rgun req'd. Previous ---hourly wage + a 1.'0m· ---------tag.Add25<eacb. l'lt•a..,t• < ontaC't '1 r' lll•alonom1l'>, I orp. ~11lh1·Jn, G7f>-6700 !>Ult.>s exper \l!('ful, but SECRETARY mission & an xlnt bonus YORKIE PUPS AKC Pc NaU&a.hyde living we will train you Call Shorthundrequlred, No travel. F .t1me as STEWARTROTH Male & Female. Call roomset.S225orbestol· ~o~becltor mooeyor. !-.Jn Cl<•mcnll· 1 ;1·ncr11l llosp1t.d ·l!.16 1122 REST AURAMT·PIZU Mr Lynn. 893-6531 _ex~ 979 7550 avullablc AHT1'9)UIS 982·171B re-r. Cootact Jim, 559-3817 PILOTPllMTIMG SECRET"'RY TIREOOFTHE •MrERICAN OAK• --------,_a_t_w_o_rk _____ _ Full & p llml' openings "' ROUTJNJo:? nie largest most com hnauzers, min. AKC .. -P.O. BoxJ.560 --------~ lor ~l'n('ral n•st work ---------P/tlme Must be em c1ent THIS JOB IS FOrt YOU, preheoslve inventory ol Salt '& pepper. 1 M, 1 fo'. n mattress, sprinp Costa Mesa, Qa, 82631 nearO<.: .11rport '.\lust he S/\l.F$ & know S/11 & type 60 CALLUSNOWA'r American Oak Antiques Champlines.581-6249 &frame. $50 l't·r:.un needed to tare lor l11·l· plants 1n com m1•rr1ul St'tltni:. 1-;xpl.'r & tran:,p ncn•s:.. Call •1 lo I 30 [>57 Ol50 PIZZA ManOCJer & Cook. "'ul + bonus + part of htc>me,,ll If IL \OoUrks llUI Call ~IH-7k63. l'LASTH.:S MOLD PRESS OPR To upc1·at1• 1njcct1on mol<.11nl! m..1c h1nl·s & trim :.mall pl~1:.t11· p;irb Day shift 1·.xpl•r vn·f'd Wall lr .. 1111 STACOSWITCH IMC 11:19 HJkcr Costa :\h''>a :>19·30H Equal Oppor Employl.'r PRINTING STHIPPER lluahly color hlh<J. Mut.t know ull forms of 1.trip '1>1ng rro m t•olCl r 1 hrochurt:5 to labels. /\c c·uracy an important fac •tor M an~ compan } , lll'nt·f1h l'l0Jrtrc<.' Pre:,, • f;.t I 7n5:'1 ' l'roi:ramer S}bol J\">I exp. prd'<l. lflcx1blc hrs. :.mall 'llynam1c· c·omp.1n) lksumc lo Ol'lromp. 3Jo: •!!arbor Bl\'d, Sh• K H, • l ' M .. II! or e>l'l'r .\1Jpl~ in LOOK AT wcpomnt. aS3c.t50 •hrrr toSst•teavrtc '1 83~-8095 in calif. We buy direct & Golden Retriever pups 645-1705 WATERIEDS p .. r~m. " ;;1 pass the savings on to k ' DISCOUNTED Nelson.960443l Between8:30&11AM you . Also. Antique AKC, 11 wee s. SlOO. Oroplaar table, 2 velvet THIS!!!! • TI)!E/LlFE Hcproductions are avail. 536-8110 chairs, twin 1pring ina.tt. From $117.77 complete S(iT l'bl'l'EHONJ'S PIZZA STORE :!JOCI S E Hnslol S;.anla Ana I lc1ght' !>-l!J.1.1674 1~l·lll lo :'llcDonald~J fo~11.1al Oppor Emplo} er R1~taur:.int Time L.1fe Libraries has SECRET ARY LlBRAJU€S at lbe very lowest prices. anted: Toy Poodle for Maytag washer 64S·t3hl Aqua Heaven 5S4-'7590 opcrung~ ror part & Cull· Jnterestmg, fast paced Equal Opp Emplyr mtr Located at. little girl's Christmas. Ira office desks, couch, For sale: Family Tennis time t elephone sale:, Newport Ctr Law ofc. 750 E. OYER RD. S.A. Not much money butlov· glasa cote tble & end tbl, Club MemberahJp. CaJI representattvei; Good Mag H, legal e:'<per pre· <At The Newport Frwy) ln& home. 847·5377 color portable & B/W 77().1832. working ¥tmosphere. f'd. Gooch.U. 644-6400. Tetat.hone Sales 751-8922 TVs. lots of other furn. Near n-'1xl0 al··-'num Make good money. llrly We '!f:1' train. Earn OpenSun·Wed 10-a amoyed/Huskie PUP· 963-9687 .,_ ........ waoe + bonu~es ,. SECRETARY •·Tbunr·Satino pies. 6 Wka. old. Xlnt storaeeabed. ISO. ,, " At 1 N 8 rt ch r Is t ma s money "' .,..., !amll d .-.c 979 ..,...., ..... ..-A i:uaranlecd comm. while tomcy n · · aarpo Salary and commission. Y ogs. _.. .,,_.. ~atchlng dresser $30. Bed. oru.·-·• ME N m'S working flexible shifts. area has immed. opening Days ~.Cheat or drawers $30. w k c •-c· f or perm . p /lim c Call. Tjlrnotcenturythings tor Book cabinet 125 . Na".ajo ruas. Pvt Prty. FAMILY ttlZZA bl!';':,. ~~~.~c""y~~o ~~~ w/possible f/llme In near 631·033'7. ask ror Don s ale. Massive couch & Beaut.l!ul sweet tempered 548-2;0l? Fr1/Sat/Sun only, Dtt. PARLORS sellorhavethedesireto future. l,cgal cxper. Telephone Recept . Jor chair; custom made Cor female black standard . .9-10'11.610--41157 • 1 11 h" helpful, but not req'd. 111 f •1 t t a Pasadena estate poodle puppy. 15 weeks, W.· 8055 1Jnd Ml Ide •Tral...-& earn ca us at tis Dictaphone.type60+,sh ~;:ia&a~i~c"+sa~efr~~ Horsehair stutled, &old havepapers.allsbotsex·•·~··•••d•••••••••••!• ~%ne.!we r. •Coob-~1u~~er betwn 8 30 & so~, plt.:a sant phone ~~S600 P:~ mo. call color: ssoo both pieces. cept r abies. S300/of'r. PUIUC AUCTIOH m9621 $300. •lartenders 833.S095 \'01ce. Sa lary com · 752·7606 for mtervlew Funush your husbands 551·3321 MANY FINE ITEMS OF --------- •Delinry Drin rs YOU WON'T BE mensura&.e w/exper. Call appt omce! I ~lue·~een qt. Adorable Cockapoo pup· ESTATE JEWEL Ry' Kini O'Lawn front throw Part.time openings for DISAPPOINTED ~ :>t0-7107M/W/Frl (10am· cannln~ Jars. orcelam pies juat in lime for ART OBJECTS, AN· mower, id cood $100. womt•n & men w 1Lh out· TIMr_ 1 •-2pm > Cor a ppt TELLER hoed, unc Uda. $10 ea. or CbrtStmas S20 5&1-1983 TIQUES, FINE FURN., 983-2314. I h ..,...n:; 3 for S2S. Set ot orelnal - . . ETC PHONE FOR IN· --------f~~.:P~~:.:~~,·~:~s w:rk~ LllRARIES, IHC. SECRETARY <EXEC> Exper. full time teller "Dixie" ,1~ FREE lrtlb Setter Pups, S?S " FO.° & BROCHURE. llNSlotMec•a.u Over II! & at.le to work EqualOppEmplyrmtf With sale/BR Exper. Irvine office. Pasadena with canoing jar .$100. Purebr:ed . 645·2200 Un111ual German' made Must be sell starter W/· Federal Savln&s 551·0111 purchase 646-6188 after H d Ii 'c II Antique Slots. Several to ~tva~~111f1~plys~,~~~S~P;~ ----------1 xlnt skills. Salary _open. Ask for Mrs. Benson p.m. · ,.. ~~ome ne. 8 Wkds !Sec 3nf.& 4th & choose from. $100. I 1 SA.LISMAN Apply 8570 Hamilton, E.O.E. ~ . lllh & iOth. 31B Coronado 497.2743 CUI~ EHEOS ElectncalDepartment H.ll. or can 960·4334 • AMTIOUEIRASS""•toYou 8045 <Bal Penn> lOam-~pm. -------- M ' 48 Hrs per wk. Sat & Sun anytime. ______ Tow Truck Drivers ex· Balhroo~ Fh:ture&. Frj •••••••••••••ei!••• .. ·~· &t ofr buys, everything Norwegian Blue l\:>x FornJly Pino Parlors .a mwt. Exper'd. Apply. 1 per'd. Top pay. Apply, Pana Llahtlrlg Fixture.1, Free dog, to good homo, Jg goet, oven, furn, clothes, · stOle. $150. J180 S Brlstol,S.A. Kerm RlmaHardware SEC Y Gl&WTowing,lOOO lrvlne Hardware & Coltec· blk s&q>er frteodly male cmplt hse sale. Greai S73«>07or6'1a..5759 110 F.. I 'Uh. Costa Mesa 2666 Harbor Bl, CM Our company 11 seekl~g Ave, NB642·12S2 wb~. ~ d~. 10·6 iireat w /kicift 4964121 Christmas bat11lns. F.tory Sale SALfSMAH an enthusiastic aec Y S IV S •·....&:-1015 Auction 1015 Cootie Jan, Bath ac· RETAIL CLERKS w/good typlna & d1ct1· • ,ANTIQUES _........ Hardware DcpaMment lion ski Ila to aid an {:"· TRUCK 1237 So. Main, S A ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• ce:slil factory 2Dds • dis· p lime Sat & Sun & 1 d ' . I ""1 •114 r.=====-pueu·c AUCTIONs---·· con nutedatyles,sellln1 pan 1ng t ccretaria DRIVER, .... ... bel -hol l DJ weekday Apply, sen•1ce to the C.M. area -... -....aa---.... ----1-0-1-0 1 0-w ua e. rs Kcrm Rima Hardware Must be d nd bl •-.......---· • bA welcome. Moo uant Sat. 2600 Harbor Bl. Ci\1 self·starteer. P:y ~:m· TRAIMEE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Kerrigan Auto ,..:arts Twin Winton. 31996 Sales Person for discount menaurate w /1kill1. We are looking for a Jo'nGHT DAM AO ED ,_1t1Mtg..,..a...w . Ca~ Capiatraooft.San ti.el t!d l t 2 d & ~2983 person with a valfd HorroINT SALE. 3308 W ..... nesday, "--mber 7 ... 10•.00 A.M. JAdobeuan p1~ .• ~a>cross El P wnn c s · n furniture store in Mis· ;==; • California driver's W. Warner nr Harbor, vv ~ "' fa.. 3rd !!hafts. No cxperlenre sion Viejo. catalo• Sales. S I S• •. •t• k l I d ""'nt An 979 """1 51"·c18 E"'"t F~-St rcq'd . We .ttam those Exp. dltslrablo~ (714) iervtce ·•~!do., n" (.e~: license to ma e oca e· .,.. a a. .,,.,.,. V".Jo' ao ,.,, . & WALNVT Hl·baclc ~hn ,_ _______ -i hlrlod. Applicants apply 1es.1224 an , exper • a,. .,. Jlver1e1. Muat havelood CASH PAID Santa Ana, Ca ornla w/blue fabric $50 ea. PURCHASING ·1t ves. FUll 6 pJUm•. AP. drivinc record art be For Wabr /Dryn/Refrla Rod,, W)lte BW'ke u,t lr4 . UTOTEM Sa1es l)ly, Sbe1l auuon, .1'7th • a b I e t 0 ta k 8 0 n wor"'"" OI' not 957-8183 Dece ber 8th 10 00 A M swivel ah.re •• M~H SR. BUYER UNUSUAL OPPTY IrVtne, NB. respooslblllllel. ...... Thursday, m : ' • dryer $100. Olrt'a 20" lvt11wa1 ~. ane. STORES MDC & WOMEN Service St.a. AUendant, Co lete SU ..I. t bUr.41 *'5.ltO-JSIS Sa lea people & cre w "IPS:d. l'ull«" pJthne. Call Paul Hansen. ('114) R e c o n d l t lo G e d mp perm81 l\e 1-:lcctrocucs manu!actur managers needed for Apply ArcQ Station, 17th 7te~~w.lo arran1e an ln · Refrigerate.rt, 1'Ubera ma company bas an rm· l.ocoted At: new di~ .,, majm-ldrvlne,C.M i;:,:~ Oppty.Emptoyer • 4tryen . .P'r el1b t 12.C5 N. T~ (Con~~oflif~~n & Katella) tm!dlatc need for a Sr l.1442 L11mp11on-. a. Grv corporation X1nt train· 1~~-~~~~~~~~i darna,ed & Model Home vrangt, -1.1111M1 'Buyer with 3 or more SIOW. So\lthSt, Anahtn lng pro1tram, high eorn· Service staUon attftldont1, retW'nJ. Guar/del. Alto years expcncnce m com· 111 Del Mar, C M. 1n1t potenllal, paid vaca· O.y 1htft1 only, tuU lime, new a ppliances at Cott + ponenl and rabr1cated 1185 Ulenneyrc. Lug Bch tlorui, paid health & lire A•rport Texaco . .t878 10%. DUNLAP'S 10960 parts buytnl(. QuahCled We ure an equal insutnnce. Call Mrs. Campus Dr. NO Talbert (at Euclid) FV. candidate would meet OPJ)()rtunityemploycr Smlth,540-~7 S.rvlce Sta. Nl&bt Attend 9634121 0pn7days. the above requirementll ~~--~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;~ 2 Or 5 rtltes a wk. AMJ", .and would have heavy ---# (ollow·up m expediting Sl-;.Ll. Idle items with a Sheil, 1'7tb&lrvtne, 8 hock.a.round. S~lll>' com· Dally PUot Claaslfied Ad. m e n•urate with ex 642·SS78. penence. 1•1eaae send re· -----------1 11wne « •PPIY in l*'IOft. Only r .. ume11 with ~a1acy hl•tory wm be $1.62 per DAY _oOsldtrid. 11'1Jat'1 ALL you Pa>' rora ~IO day ad In the Sunday, becember 11th 1 :00 P.M. ,,,........,~. Restaurant Fixtures ' NAUTICAL OEC0ft4TOR ITEMS HATCH·COVER T~S • CAPTAIN CHAIRS • BRASS W TERNS • ETC. 103 Nor1h ~ Drive NewpOrt Beactt, Calif omla ... w...... tltO ....... IMport.d 9120 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tu.ct.y, o..~ e, ttn DAILY PILOT CIJ, WE .Uy MM . 9720 Auto1, lm'°"'9d ..,.._, lntporhd .._, U1ed 1U11'•"'~~•r 11 , 4 tr ~k 8 ~'AU TI U 1. '7 I ••••••••••••••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------... 1 ~r w1rnnty. new."°; ~i~:.~1 "!x~:"l .. 1 r C~-=::• * DllVI A* ~~~ •••• !?.~! ~ .......... !?.~~ ~•••••••••••••!~~ l oiler. ·.Ul I'\ , a1 . Call <Tl4)511 ~--'-------• *LITTLE. •• 1f "13 Mercede. ~SOSt.. Im· ·n Javelin, 11uto. P /B, ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANT!D: H" Dutch dour w /wlndow . Reuoaable.1SlolUl3 WANTID . llCYC&.I UMCISOR 711-4140 .. lO'WUdeat,r ... ,... .............. CONNlll ·. s •ve A ·~oT mac. Wlrewbll.1ky blue, 00 TRG, very lood cund PIS. air Q7QO, bal olr. '150or hke new, $32&~ a·;.u VeMdet f H O A ., botb topa, all xtru. ~~II. 11700 or b\l•t MUS · Zea!tll Chriltma1Cltt.llO S3IO •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• CHEVROLET SHOP •COMPARE 113.500.175-Zlll . "11 Pacer. lo ml, fully , Qx\vt 4 teet atrtd lefal •es MBZ 220SE. 4 •pd. air, VCllclwegn t 770 loaded, 1tereo, air, VS, . klTt. 12 per(ec\ ~nd dune buaay SIOO. C.Jt 2.82f Harbor Blvd. Vnly lnu-. Really a Clean •••••••••••••••••••••• blk on blk. Mutt aell • M9tM new hardware. hand trlr ~ COSTA MESA One! 11750. $41.()788 EB VW conv. R4tff, klnt $3000. Gre1 07·1971 . ..,,_. lncld. S.US. "6-•1 --------1 '4 ... 1200 _ cood. nu llrte It shock!\ Ma.as7 . .;,T ...... •••••••••••• ~ SUpt/ 4 Wheel Dri•H 9150 ---------{ t t 7 i DATSUN 11 o '70 Mereedea Bent 250, 1 Clutch " trams rebuilt .-------- ... W.-. t 0 ~ t070 ••u••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~1;r,og~~ SEDAN, v ry cleoa1 1 ramily car, very clean. Clean In & out. Red with ~ H~et. or:: ojit ,.... 03 •••••••••••••O•••••••• lt7S• FORD F·250 4x4• FOREIGN, DOMESTIC owner, aa,ooo ml, new air. Atlchellns, AM/FM, black top. 4 1Pff(f SltiOO. d ~&:flt~ an:~k:d ••;;;~~··;~~··~~:,;: $200 Reward for helpl~ Automatic, air cond.. or CLASSICS rad Io I ,t. ti '4 ·6193 M.950. 441-1417 003-31B7 Jl-Ol8&4 • ev equlprnt • line ancllon tlnd a 1Up rental f6r a 32 cnbe control, a.w Uru If your ear ta •~tr• clean PM/Wkndt '68 MBZ 250 SE Sed:in. '67 Bug, xlnt cond. '1200 radio•. ·raclni' botto~ l1lander. {learn Jl'l',', w/wblte 1poke wbeet1, teeu.snrat. • .... •-tter. Sunroof. Showroom orbtst.CaUJ ecu48.59941, Cellleo 9tt 5 a 1 n t 1 • n d e r 8 verUcle clearance 46 . auxiliary tanl<I. other ex· IAUElt IUICk All~!., "i:oo&or1. coad. $.1500. Ph 642·778'7 545-501! ••••• .. ••••••• ••• •••••• M blJt blend h .... Porieaho're buoy• llf•: Wkdys (714) 98S·9657, lru lie only 41,000 mllet. -Harbor Bl d -ans e; er; cun.1 h • " WJmda (714)987-11617. Prl. pt'y. Call 638·8549 --v · · •-•• l98lt Mercedes 230 6 eyl. '75 VW Bug. Xlnt cond. ~~:~ S::,8;~; wall •helf raft.I, elect. bUse pumps. alter 7 pm or weekends. Costa Maaa 9'19·2SOO Del•~ Toclayl . $3500. Su.zannne, 046· 77U lS.500 ml. S3500. ---------• Pre11ure wtr 1y1tem1. AVAIL: Short term allp Tfta -.-otc,64.2·1999evs 645-5QU9 (wkdY•I P.P. 673-aUD for 28' 1a1lboat. stlp tor Jl!-s "77" v.-• I 30' • alJbo • Jd1 I .....-ftftl 1 •t "•IMW.~ 977 MGI 9744 HUGE SELECTION MMsical Power 9040 ~.1 , at 1 ete CJ ·5 's, CJ·7's , W¥-.-HaY•GofToGoJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEW&USEDCARS ,.....,._..., Oil ••••••••••••••••••••••• for 80 .35 lllil boat. Nr. Cherokees. Wagooeera, PAID '73 MGB H&ld &i soft top. I -as•Lltll !~.,l?!.,,_Slt . Ba'I Penin. Pick·u"'", uptoll,200dla· • •••••••••••••••• ••••••• """ "" ,,_..,.,.., ,_ RlcH, new clutch. brk1, Top cub$$ for your VW Classic electric Glbaon '77 Sea Ra Y 24 ft· -rounts. 5 yr 50.ooo mile rlnp & valves. Almost Paud for or not. Call guitar, mint cond. 1930 Weekender with 70 loah.. $pHct & waCrr~aMll~le1. new Urea, car cov6r. Keith or Jerry. vmtage $3"15. 842·3379 hours. Mutt seU; bought 5'cl 9010 ..,.......... rn ftC run.1 gd. '3300/make ofr. BOU WITH.AM VW • 1977& 1976 CADILLAC SIVIWS '• \'1olln SBS. Tepor banjo $100. &42·3379 Office Fwwftun & Eqm,_..t IOIS ••••••••••••••••••••••• SCM Electl"Oltallc Copy. mg Machine, model 44. Good c:ond. w /paper & toner. Beat ofr. Ofc 642-8000. 8087 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "BONGO" 6 mos old African Grey Parrot, tame & taUclna. Serious inquiries only. 405-6799 new boat. Prt. ply. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2001 F. lst, SA 558-8000 5"-8175 7600 Westmln5ter Ave. Jerry al 15' Classic 6S hp Mercury -'iiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii'I 89J.7Mlor638·'l880 544-1151 O/B, trlr, extras. Very SIOOO OFF II Opet 9746 ------- or546-1200 rcasonable.642·9793 ALLHIW ••••••••••••••••••••••• '69 Suod1'al pop·top SEA RAY'S All 1971 Models I 8'-30' HARRISON•s SEA RAY 2327 So. M aln, S.A. 540-6555 3101 Coast Hwr. N.B. 631 ·2547 c IC E IMPORTC•RS Accident damaged ·10 c•mper. Rbll en&, * HERO E "' '11 Cle• we Opel Cadette. quick sale casst1''M. Tr•apo:rtaffoft •PICKUPS AU. MODELS Demo " executive uJe $175. 640-4297 an 5PM S1795/btt. 494-2130 ••••••••••••••••••••••• W"'G0 ... 1£aas ·-.. ' • "" "11;'"" DOW iO•ui on-uurry · , __ ...._ 9750 Red Convertible Claaatc ~.Sal•/ orrerGoodThrul2/18/77 WE 888DOVESTREET _..__. • vw N b 1 Reilt 9120 HUR RV (Near MacArthW°'BJvd ••••••••••••••••••••••• S$ • ew alt, co I & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 30 To Choo.-front MEED ct Jamboree Road) · '77 Porsche 924, blk. ruel pump. Runs real For' Sale: Big cabover c..u.a ..... 0 MTRS CL!AM NEWPORT BEACH xtr:u. Best offer. good. Bsl orr. 64S.79N carqper Kint C<Uld VT-"" USID C"'RS 133.llpO 213-427-8460 anytime Reasonob'te. Call SJ6.70s6 2001ElitSA558-8000 ,.. _ --------- Motorbecl like~ 40 '77 Scout. Green. P /S HOW ~pdDallun 2807. t /C, d4 ~~~~~l~t~~~J~~~ '7.;/~l~~~t~u,fin~~~~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• P/B. V·ll \!ngme. Lug. CALL PAPPY • ma1s, "n con · aell (213)429·3860 S217S. (1) 4944059 •77 Puch Newport Moped, gage rack. Am/Fm B· 540·5630 Copper brn . SS900.1 ___ -'------- xlnt cood, burgundy. lrack. 3yearor36,000ml. 759-0431or7~·6737. '62 Ponsche 3S6 Convert!· E~~~fnf!~:frrion (5> To Choo9e From All full)' equipped wtlh deluxe feature1. 197b Seville, <2JJNUI>, priced ulowu $9888 Nabers Cadillac 2600 H.trhnr Blvd. CO\IJ Mc~J S40·9 I 00 $395 <+ bonus Slladel contract. 15,000 miles. Leaving state, mU11t sl '76 blew/hardwp. $4900. 494·21.30 ----------PIC11t01 & 0"9Clft• 1090 ~6 It. Thunderbird lockJ. or best orrer. m,800. 837·9'110, 830-6686 B·2102drAM/FM, auto, 64G-7l77 645•7400 SZ495 '68 Cadlllac SDV. Ex· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Formula (o((shore). 3Sl 642·l554or646·1991 afi5:30 2626HARIORILVD. nu tires, 16K, pert cond. ,64 Porsche 3S6SC with '76 VW Westphalia Pop cellenl aa2ndauw.Drive New DrandNamc Pianos Vll''I, all navigational --COSTA MESA ~ Gd Christmas girt. sunroof $S200 Top Camper. Xlnl cond. wbdleve. 979-4884 lO';, over C()lll. ~ear & ground tackle. MOPED. :.hghUy used COST A MESA 673-8120, ext. 266 64().7177· · 64.5-7400 al500. Call 586-89'lo&. ""'"rp 1970 Coupe de Ville, Beach Mualc Cenll•r Sleeps four. Under 50 Rotavus. bl1tck. 370 m1. AMC & JEEP WE IUY .,., .. m04BcachBlvd,H.B. houri. used 1nnce new. 6 Excellentcond.968-0863 TOO USED CARS! '7leng,trans,&rearend. ~, 9751 72YWCAMPER allextras.Newtlra,ail 847 .,,..,n wheel trailer included· $400. 5'8-7401or642-0480. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Excellent condition ahocb, disc brakes .....,.,., alsu full canvaa. Call BATAVUSMoped, lrke MANY We're the new Chevrolet Ted '7 R . Stereo etc. and must seli $2500. or beat offer. 1 lammond Organ, John Felt.er at 642.0010 or brand new. ridden only JEEPS dealership in the Irvine 1 16 rroot wbJ dnve, 4 ror $2800 lhia weeteQd. S48--0CMO ExcellealCondluon ~8211 fortyeasym1te1.$37~. MUSTSELL ?O Auto Center. We need "740atsun260Z,goodcon· cyl, auto, new Urea & 675-9137 --------- $168S. 644-6154 675-0969 JEE°" BY your used car' dltion, white, black int. batt. ll60. 673.-7974 Old 20· fiberglass boat, & ""' JOE 813-1577 aft5PM aJ * 75 Ced $clV. • Sacrlflc~ Hammond mot.or and trailer. siso. ~ycle•/ CH RISTMAS lolhlope 9756 '71 VW BUi, ne1Pt' P Dt. Hegent Full Organ. Bat complete. 558-0300 5cooten 9150 Please Ca II MAC PHJRSOM "75 Datsun 710, 4 dr, 1Uck, •>•••»ot•••1•••••.•••••• a/cond. Lo ml's. Days Loaded, beautiful. $."5890. · oer tattes MS-Z283 -••••••••••••••••••••••• 549-8023 CHEVROLET Uke new. 10 ml, Reuoaa· •1 DEALER IN U.S.A. =o· evea1wknd1 Pvt pty. 84().2121 · "'Boat w12S HP Johnson 1974 2SO Yamaha !'t1X· 2524 HARBOR BLVD 21 AutoCent.erDrlve ble.495-1478 ROY , I~~~~~~~~~ UprtghlPionol595. & lru1ler. Good cond. Terry kit front fork, Bos Costa Mesa lRVJNE Fet-Nrt 9723 ~ CARVIPlt 66VWBug.Ru.ns&lookf '78Sevtlle,lt1old,lmmac, UIMSq Grand S97S Great for f1i.h1Jlg. $.1$0. shocka. etc. ~. Call r; good Gd Urea radio all xt.ru S8 250 Steinbach UPR seso 963-2963 962-9898afler7 p.m. '71 L>odae. new whls, tires 768-7222 ·····················-ROUS·ROYCE S650. Ph: 548-4253 61S:2181 Paul's 'iClftO ShoptHt & paint. Super' $4,300. Ferr a r I DI no '7 4 . , .. .lemMf't• i'lB W. l!lthCMS48·7Zn 'lB ft UnJfllte S~rtfl&he~. Suzuki 380 GT. all xtras IT75 2uu 4utol. l~.d Brnrrao. Lo ml. Mint =::r• .. c" lt's yours! '70 vw. on1) Two lm Coupe deVllles, ------- -1 owner. In mint cond1· lmmac. Low mlles, 5750. -••••••••y••••••••••••• cond. Great investment. $400. Rblt ens, trans, & loaded, spot.Iese, locally Baby Grand Piano, good lion & loaded' Cu11tom in· Pvt.ply. 557-2978 ·n CJ7 w 1hdtp, 11,000 mi, Alfa RCNMo 9705 il9,9501oCr. 675·7903 CLOSED SUNDAYS . starter. 645·1698 driven. Sll,000 ea. M6·1022 cond. $1500 or best ofr. tcrior, pilot, A.D.F. take over payments,••••••••••••••••••••••••-9725 1__... 9765 or213·S92·1563 5.'i7·6709evebcsl Vll.F., sunlog, outrig· 1970 Yamaha ATr 125 TomStovall537·2271 """ · ... , .. ,.. '72 VWCampcr.New eng ---~--1en1, AC 'DC natural gas w/all streel le1aJ c<1uip. 1976 red Alla Spider. Ex· •••t••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••u•••••••••• all rcpts. 11unroor. pert '77 & '76 Sporting G~ 8094 rcfrlger11tion & cooking, Xtra tires, etc. Xtra cln Trucks 956 ~e~~!Mc/~Jste~~J~ '7 20 8 000 124 s 1 PYDERhl Only IEFORE YOU cond 1 . Jkendff ~~~ ~294 CADILLAC ••••••••••••••••••••••• t)lminl WP w /enclosure, sns. 548·0063 •••••••••••••••••• ••••• mileage. 968--0863 • m • mai w s, new SElL YOUR eves w 1 .,,... • ._.. SEVILLES Fi!>c l\cr Superaloss new Chryaler manlfoJ.ds, XL X1 --d 1976c1..1.e.yy tires, wh.lte, xlnt. cond. TOYOT• , vw . k 20 t.o hoon fro .All snowakls, 195 cm w Jo risers & elbows plws ex· . 75--a.cc. nt con · l"'f5 Ami 9707 Must .ell S495C) firm. PP. "' 71 BUS. M$ e orrer c m. l><Jngs.·$75. MK·SOO Wood tra fuel. Call Oalc at 77 Must. sell .s375. EL CAMIMO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 714·752·7400 from 9 to See us for a top dollar Call after6. l<';:~f~D:).priced to sell. J70cm w/Eckel bind· 498·2709. 494·4554 Automatie, AM /FM '7& Audi Fox 4 dr A/C 6PM & 714-MS-62183 aft eaUmatel Ph646·87<.i2 .... mgs·MS. Ski ~ls·slzes loafs Sall 9060 MotorHo...s.Scde/ stert°, pwr. steering & aunrt',atereo'.mag~.war: 6PM MAR9UISTOYOTA Volvo 9172 HUGESAVIN&S ~~5'7•·8~14'5lOLS7lr·15!'a·S251 .. e'•••••;•••••••••••••••u Rewt/Storofe 9160 bra es, air cond. "·ranty. Xlnt. S5195. '75Xl.9,reallylike new. MISSIONVIEJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ALLEN ~ ... ' u " W"u.a1uruLTS7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• much. m uch morel 968--0872 Brn/tan Int, "M·FM ll1·21104tJ.1210 1-•'iYOU .skates-Size SN. skate ba.g Al"ll 1 ...,,.. <503745). Thl1 bel 8e " ~"' Olds/Cadlllac/G?ttC & skate dreu·slze 10 ~l_lr_ourboat thru Rent a 1977 E1tcutlve beauty~ '73 Audi lOOLS. AM/FM steroo.Loml,alr,map, SALEorTrade"70Corona SEU.YOUR &D.Frwy .. AveryExlt. ~chlld)·aU for SS<>. Call SOUJHWISTliM ~~:0°r~~C:,,~e rr':i~ MJ:r'.; OMLY $4595 stereo. xlnt cond .• $2800. PP. $389S. 846-2389 1900 Sed. for similar VOLVO, LAO UNA NIGUEL &12-0l3S. YACHT SALIS Friedlander. Call any of or best offer. SSM29l '75 Fiat ~19, x.lnt cond. Lo automatic w /steedng See us for a top dollar 17141495-6430 Never uied: Domonlto FUJt,IHIWrORT theseaumbers ~ 9709 ml'•. Loaded. '408$. Call columnabft.646-S308 estimate! Pvt pty wanu, 75 or 76 1 Pantera) ski boOts, s1 DEALERS 191-6771 ....................... lr7S.29l8 Tri....,_ 9767 MAR9UtS Y(n.VQ rromorlaownr. 812 man's, rrJC SlSO now 1714)673·9211 537.7777 2MSHARBOR BLVD. 1960 Claulc Austin '76 Spyder 12.4 Convert. 1 •••••••u•••••••••••••• MISSJONVIEJO 64.2·S766 SlOO/bltorr ti7S~-828-8188 540.6410 540.0213 Healey 3000. Xlnt cood. Owner. Mint cond. Must TR 6, '73, wht blu, rlbar. 8ll·lll0 495-1210 ------- 9 - 9 - 17 · TV Redi CORONADO 25 · Priced for lmm.ed. sale. see to apprec. Home am/frn. cate caas .. cmp Hiil 5~ 1098 by WESCO MOTOR HOMES • '71Dodge'.tonw/new3.S 67S-8344or540-3174 67$-1503.Work640-81.50 atblta, 2topg..1ki rack, ORAMGECOUMTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• ; •• ••••••• •• • •••• Xlni condition many ex FOR RENT yard Dixie Dump. IMW 9712 F. 1 aerv record.I avail. 54895. VOLVO 'l!l "17. Auw. air, PS, PB. • . From Sl.00 wk 770.0644 8'7·3452 72128 11t. new pant, xlnt 714 :581-8418 EXCL',.IVELY VOLVO Perf Int. Orig Rugcer "<''·eral hi:aut1ful t•olor lrru. VlTH SLIP. -. -••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. $1400. 'u<i> Oranne. Nu wht vm wp, T\''S, S99 & up. S & S TV Must Sell! RENT Fireball 23' Self 1975 FORD• 2 Ton Custom 494-468\ 76TRIUMPHTR7 Laraeel Volvo Dealer S189S~(i7S-894t 21.62 Newporl lJhd, 118, 751 ·(;..I~'> 957-0396 cont. Auto air. CC, CB, Shortbed·VB. automaUc, Immaculate & loaded! lnOran1eCounly! O l.G42·U40 I nvaleParty swreo,slps6645-2283 AM /FM1tereot.ape,slde Ha.dcr 9727 .Alrcond.,AM/FM..st.ereo BUYorLEASE Che'fJolet 9920 tanks, air shocks, ••••••••••••••••••••••• caaaette, 100 + ma11, DlRECT u••••••••••••••••••••• Count the blessings Tut:n them into Christmas Cash bV placing •n ed under our DAILY PILOT Ct:IRISTMAS TREE This sin ad only $4.00 29 ft. Apollo motorhome. ch.rome pipes, chrom e '75 Hondo Civic CVCC Sta michelin Urea, aunrool, ~li)~- Must see to appreciate! stepbumper, fog lampa, Waa.New tlrea.lowner. only U,000 miles, • . • '70 El Camino SS 398, 4 .Call John F'elter'at bulloo tarp, mags & Gdcond.4M-llle4. c:armlnered w/saddlelD· M2-0010or54G-8211. ·Aea1-· .,,900 Pri ...... __ M apd, r1s. P /8, A/C. New --------1 cus.,.,m .. nt . .., . . 1978 BMW's ... "". any more ex· --~~"""-....,..,,.. clutch. $1900.M8·3603aTt Holl.._ ~lal pptym. ·• &1U910 after 4 an.d Mew '77 lraal Pr/ply <JAX 76> 2025 S. $ _, HERE MOW! HONDA Cars 64().11760r 831•2040 Anaheim 750-2011 ..,...;P-..m_. -----*w_lnhr ~·* 1007 Chev. in ton camper Mu.1y '7• Spltnre. worth $2700. ---------'13 Monte Carlo, Loaded Fcatunng 20. 30 . Fully shell + boot overload COMrLITI . ~ Nda minor \ltOI'•. $2200. '70 JS.. 4 epd, AM/FN Xlnt cood. $2500/bat ofr self·cont.alned motor sprinp.Runsgood. IOOYS~ ToCIHflM "'°"91 Mom'• 88a·S845 stereo. new tires, extr1 673-8320 homes. Color TV1 Power 11325 962 7573 nvr U.._.IVl!RSITY ' sharp. $19 9 ~. Bk l'. Plant.slpe8.NlcK'•R.V. ' . NOWOPltil " I: "16TR..fl,manyxtras.Xlnt 673·3607 You don't need a g1m to Ceoter842·741S '68 Ford Pickup. New · OWl•t.U. condJtloo. $S750. "draw raat" when you '«t Sf\uta 17., fufly sell tires, A/C, $900. Call UCB.I 811' ...... Cera • GMC CaU631·1525. '67 Volvo 122 Cla11lc, place an ad In the Dally cont'd. Very good cood. B»S88l SlllCTIOM OP Trucb . =:~w cond. Beal ofr. Pilot Want Ada I Call now Bltofr.548-9633. '74 Mazda Rotary P/U. IMWllSALIS 2850HarborBlvd. WantAdHelpt 642·5678 _-tG __ ._51'18_. ____ _ FOR RENT-20. Mini Sbatp, shell, maa1, upe. We mA.Y have )'OW' next Costa Mesa 540-9840 Allttil. New . tlOO Aldot, Mew 9100 •Mew MOO M H Lo miles. $3000. or oUer. car in our lnventoey. Ca.11 ... PGt ~-u -..1-600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• olor ome, comp. 962.76650r847-0779 ~today! . ~ ~•u .,_,.,.. equip, very clean. 8112A..ito .. tr .. , .. , Std a n $171. R adio, 673-0133 '64 Inln'l PV, 41pd. Vtr, • "" "' -"' heater, recent overhaul. Lwiury 21, &flru motor new 11ltl5 on rear, RUNSSUPE.RI 8'8-3008 home for rent. Avail. f'lOO/batofr.495-4211 t7JI Christ ma,. Low rate. • 7 2 DAT s UN p. U. CM-9500. CaboverabellSlBSO. &'Sf -.~,· '14 Karinautn Ohl• COllY, · T ........ T,....tl 9170 tC-26$3 SAMfA ANA =.:.~:tf:;nd• •••••••• .. •••••• .. ••••• 'fl9 International ~. ton 83&3171 28' Al.JO I.mp., FOl"dLTD Travclall. Loaded, 'nflUUIMANOllMHOMA~ f7JI waeon. botb xlnt wtan atereo. easo.&i.zl30 . •USID IMW's; xlr ... Botb for under 'a>~ &on Ford PU 5 •pd •nm~Jl&SEU $10,000 or w /se ll · · -.... separately 548-1791 Orig ownr.-Good cond. "Tl 320I• S/R 1T7RSK ' seso.~1·553.1 '76300241pdS/R401PDP 1972 Komfou. Self. '7'1320l h~OJ.3RTP coptalned. with hot Y• 9570 '76 630lAS/l\ 712PQM m i r acle niazda T, .,..,...,. .... water (6 gals) & shower, ........................ Closed OlrS.R..,. Iota of extraa, like new. '74 Che'ry van. Q)mplete. _,....,... __ ..r .Ceiieil ..,_ '41:-'N JmU2UO. 687-4156 . Jy cu1tom, new c1tra _...... "'""'"' • ~ ,_ ,.,_.__m ZT' ln•-r ,palnt. Ma t•• A /0·, .: MUST SELL•Youra for ~~·"-• "" • AM /ti! 8 \,rack, CB. low book. Uk• new, low ~ A/C, stereo. tape, 4 Compltt o c1t m lntr. mi, xlat C!Obd, AM /FM,• ~~· lt1nl cond. P.P, _•_31512 ______ .. 1 oa &ht floor, iof4 Naida •-Rotary Wair, Clll bOW Mio~ r..ts "If Dodi • vu. Jmmac 646-87 &Ac•..rin t400 outaldel pliitb lo1lde • .... , .................. 19,000m V-8. A~~anrt, 5 lbl 15" l'plit rim tor cne. "°°° nrm. "l11' ·ZZ'r7 J'~ tr uck, w/'1ap as. Chevy Van, 1 ol a kind. tube 110. a •uc U" Ford cu• t om h •ct . w 11 1 --.:..---------1 truck wheel • Ure tor ucrlflct or trade. ...... ta.mt .....,, --~....-~---~~- I D&ISUI 810 THE FUEL-INJECTED fAMILY CAR WITH THE PERFORMANCE OF A 240-Z ENGINE . THE 810 FEATURES: • 6 WAY ADJUSTAlll DllVll"S MAT • AM '9.& STmlO MULTIPLa IADIO • TSMmGLASS ~ • POWll SlalMG • • THI 6 C:YL PUii. IMJICTID ...... • PLUS MICtlt MUON MQlllut HURRY NOW! Hllet llUCTIOM MOW llADY. flQl tMMmtATI DIUVaY 4MD. WI All OMLl ... l ,. I !(JI DALY ... OT --- ....................... ·~~ ~RD. l•~· ................ °""le,,._., f COSTA MESA DATSUN 2845HARBOR BLVD. MM4 I 0 540.02 I ~ i4 WAGON-.Uck shift, rum ad. looks ad. Very econ. 897-3101or979-5255 '76 PINTO 14000 ml, AM/FM/Casa, 4 apd, very cln, orig. owner. $2875. 548-3148, 546-5173 ..... --e-,_, ~ 9960 ....................... '71 Ford LTD Sta W&Jl. i4. 360 Fury. Full power. Auto, lo mi. Good cond. AM/FM, new tlrea/brks, 536-41633 hvy duty ahocks, fun~ '73GranTor1noWgn.Lug serviced. Imm.ac. rck. A/C, 1 owner. Trlr $1500/betotr. 963-4149 pkg. Clean. 644·5093 '71Duster,1owner,58,000 '73 Ford Gran Torino. mi, great cond. $1100. PS/P·B, new radials, 846-20Z7 Mike Good cond. Sl 795. Ph P_..oc 9965 84&-2054or (213)sai.SZ89 ••••••• .. ••-•••••••••• 1973 Fonl LTD~ 1973 Fireblrd Formula Wgn, p pass, loa , lm· 350, top cond., orte ownr, mac $2600. 642· &o mi, radlall, AM/FM stereo, new trans, $3000 1974 Gran Torino, 1 ownt or bstolr. '97-4214 car, xlnt cond. AM·FM . . tape. 2 new steel bl Try a Dally Pltot radial Urea, C.ll uytimt Qassllied Ad to buy, sell 497 ·3842 Cll' rent llOmethini. !, 1tn .. \ l I .. , 17 A.ft rnooa N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 70, NO. 3'0, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES. : ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1977 TEN CENTS Bovan Slaying Trial Judge Nixes Death Penalty Challenge By TOM BARLEY ot • OMI• ~I ... Slaff A defense challenge to an Orange County Grand Jury in- dictment that seeks the death penalty for the alleged killer of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley was struck down today in Superior Court. · Judge Hobert P . Kneeland ruled that the death penalty will stand in the case against Jerry Teachers, Principal In Hassle By ROBERT BARKER Of U. 0•11• ~let Stall An apparent power struggle between a teachers' union and a school principal has broken out . in the Huntington Beach City' 1 (elementary) School Dis trict. The controversy sparked a I special. closed-door meeting of I school trustees Monday that last· , ed for two hours and 20 minutes. I Trustees and representatives , of the Huntington Beach Elemen· 1 tary Teachers Association said I the matter dealt with a morale problem at Dwyer School (sixth to eighth grades.) However , Dwyer Principal Frances BeMie said the dispute involves more than that. · ''There is no question but that a group of teachers is determi.Ded to drive me out of my job," she ~said Monday. f School trustees, high level dis- trict administrators and teacher spokesmen refused to discuss the matte r except in the most general terms. Dr. Bennie said dissident 1 1 teachers take their concerns, which she characteriaes as M.lmors and hearsay, to district I Trustee Roy How. Dr. BeMie said that How, in turn, brings the charges to the re- mainder of the board without checking them out "and suggests that trustees dismiss me on the spot.'' How said today that he had never made that suggestion and has never asked that Dr. Bennie be fired. How said that complaints against Dr. Bennie are directed aga i n st her management methods. ''If there is truth to the charges," How said, "perhaps she is lacking in mana1ement skills and may need help. "But that doesn't make her a poor principal," he said. How said that teachers have taken their allegations to other trustees as well. Dr. Benn.le said that she has been harassed by teachers who are creating anxiety for her and (See HASSLE, Pa&e AU . * * * Peter Fiori, 41, of Huntlntton Beach, who pleaded not guilty to all charges today. Fiori, who is being held in the county jail with bail denJed, is identified by the prosecution as the man who pumped nine bulleta into Bovan last Oct. 22 during a confrontcUon outside a Newport Beach restaurant. Judge Kneeland ordered him to go on trial Jan. 23 with three .lunior Mb• Lisa Priester , 17 , of Westmins ter was the judges' choice to represent the Fountain Valley Jaycees in the Junior Miss Pageant Jan. 29 in Santa Rosa. Miss Priester, a La Quinta lllgb School senior, was selected over six other girls from Fountain Valley, Westminster and Midway City in the local pageant. Court Denies Sick Pay in Pregnancy WASHINGTON CAP) - Employers may deny pre1nant workers sick pay but cannot deny them seniority benefits during their pregnancy leave, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. In its second major decision on pregnancy in a year, the court re- lied heavily on lta prior ruling that denied women workers the right to have pregnancy benefits included in an employer's health insurance program. But the justices drew a diatinc· Uon over seniority benefit&, ell· ing a difference in "benefits" and "burdens." ''Here, by comparison, the (See BENEFITS, Page A2) frincipal Assails HB Secret Meeting I A secret meet.ln1 by the Hunt· lngton Beach City (elementary) School Diltrict Board of Trustees was attacked today by a central ltgure in the d.lscuaalon. Dr: Franca Bennie, principal at Dwyer School, said that the meeting should have been open ''10 that l could han beard the ~haraes and had a chance to respond to them." . TrU..tees held a ltntthy speclal meetlna Monday afternoon and •aid that It lnvolv~ a morale problem at the 1cbool. Dr. Bennie 1aJd that dlHldent teachen are haraulna her In an attempt to drive her out of tbe Job. • She ut4 today ttiat she had uked ~ SUpmntendent S. A. Moffet& anCI Alllltant Sui*ta· • tendent Partida Clark to have \he 1Pet'UDI held openly. Moffett anriounHd t!tti m411tlne Ja1t P'tjda,J OHi' the leltliboM. :Jfe 1ald tMN WOUJCI De an °'*' \Ulc&iai60D billon 1 .c:btauled ez. eeuutre ... ton. arrested co-defendants: Alex- ander Kulik, 28, of Newport Beach, Anthony Marone Jr., 23, and Raymond Resco, 28, both of Huntington Beach. A fifth defendant, Joseph Davis, 28, was reported to be in Tokyo, Japan, today, awaJting a jet flight that will land him in Loe Anseles tonight. Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter said he hopes to have Davis in the Orange County Jail before mJdnight. Davis was arrested in In- donesia last week. Three other persons named in the Grand Jury mdictment are still being bunted in what are described as "over- seas" areas. All eight race charges or murder. conspiracy, extortion and robbery. Davis is identiried as a former member of the Hare Krishna movement, a sect that bas figured prominently in police in- vestigation of what officers say is an international drug distribut- ing ring centered ln Orange County . Davis, three fugitives and Kulik are Identified by the pros· ecution as principals . in the operation of Prasadam Dis- tributon, Inc .. a company aJ. legedly linked to the Hare Krishna movement. Pretrial action against the four arraigned defendants has been scheduled for Oec. 16 and 19 and Jan. Ul. Kulik, Marone and Resco are free on bail. Fiori's lawyer told Judge Kneeland today that be will seek hls client's freedom on bail dur· Ing the Dec. 19 bearine. Defellle lawyers said they in· lend to seek separate trials for their clients, an as yet un- scheduled motion that will be op- posed by prosecutor Carter. If the motions are granted by Judee Kneeland, it coultl mean as many as four separate trials in January and a total of eight separate trials if and when all the defendanta are in custody. Coffee Co8t Going Down NEW YORK (AP) - CoUee prices have taken another tumble al the wholesale level, but most of them are sWl over $3 a pound. General Foods, tbe na· tlon '1 lar1est coffee roaster, announced Mon· day that it was reducing the price of It.a Maxwell Houu brand by 20 cents a pound. It was the sixth re· ctuct1on of the year and brousht the price to $3.21 a pound. At the retail level, spot checu show a pound of reg· ulaf ground coffee 1eneral· ly la selling at from $3.29 to $3.69 a pound, about $1 11\0re th,n It cost at the start of 19f7, but about $l le111 than it was in the spring when prices reached re· cordhlChl. Train Crew Rescues lliU1 Woman LEMON COVE (AP)-A crew of a train that Lravell tbrouib this run! area ODly oeculonally rescued an etdeJlY woman dJJ. abled bealde the tracks with a brotahJp. HOCKEY HOTSHOTS -Floor Hockey tea m from Clapp Special Education School in Huntington Beach has returned home with a second place finish in Special Oly mpics. Kneeling (from left) are Mike. Canfield, Omar Medina, Eric Noblitt and Roger Gallwas. Standing (from left) are Dan Tibbott, Kenny Matson, Bardo Ledezma, Nick Larsen and Pepe Palomo. Coach Dave Gerhard ls in back. Team Finishes Second Ol~ics Special for HB Youngsters The noor hockey learn lrom Clapp Special Education School in Huntington Beach won three out of four games and finished in setond place fn a Special Olym· pies event this weekend. It was the first taste of oulside competition for the nine Clapp School youngsters who competed against four teams from Northern California Saturday in San Jose. The Huntin g ton Beach youngsters were defeated in the champlonship round in their division, 6-3. But before that, they chalked up shutout victories a1ainst three other teams. Rites Slated For HB Cycle Crash Victim A Huntington Beach youth who was fatally injured Sunday night when bls motorcycle hurtled into a barbed wire fence in Trabuco Canyon will be burled Wednes. day in private f amlly rites. Graveside services are scheduled for Steven Douglas Free, 20, who succumbed early Monday morning at Saddleback Community Hospital, La1una Hills. Oallf omia mghway Patrol in· ve1U1atora said they believe Mr. Free may have been unfamlllar with Plano Trabuco Road where tbe fatal accldentoccurred . The vtcl.lm. who Jived at 16531 CbarleyvUle Driver failed to negotiate a tum on tne roadway through the hlgt;l valley paature country. "He d1dn't turn left when tho road tu.med left apd hl.t a barbed wire fence," a CHP 1poke1man said today. The victlm wu employed u a meat eutter al The Beef Palace ln HudtlllltOn Beach. He la sumved by b1a parenta. Melvin and Frieda Free, of tbe home; brothen Calvin Free and Scott Free; 1 1l1ter, Marl.an, and bla 1randmother, Mra. Frleda laham, 111 of Huntlqton Beach, Each of the Clapp school plllyers received silver medals for their accomplishmenls. All the Clapp School players have pbysieal or learning dll· abilities, according to Dave Gerhard, an instructor ln re· medial physical education. Clapp Principal Duane Disbno said the Special Olympics of· fered the first opportunity for many of the youngsters to com· pete in a sports event of any klnd. "You should have seen them afterwards," be said. "They were really tickled. They all had big smiles and that ls all they could talk about." The Clapp team is the only en· try froni an Orange County public school lo parUcipate in the San Jose competition. The lhootlnl star ot the locaJ · team waa Nick Larsen who • scored 13 goals. Other man of tbe team are Erle Noblitt, Bardo Ledezma, Omar Medina, Roger Gallwas, Pepe Palomo, Kenny Matson, Mike Canfield and Dan Tibbott. The concept of Special Olym· pies was developed 1.n 1968 by the Joseph Kennedy Foundation to provide competition for ban· dicapped youngsters, Gerhard said. Missionary Abdaeted? 'Love Slave' Trial Ordered in London 0 Many words cannot quench loH TIM can flooda drown it." witness stand tor the first time and told the court: "I would like to thank you so much for 1tvlng me the op- Portunity to speak. I have been trying for three months to get word to the outaide world. I was in great fear that Kirk An· derson 's Iles and fabrlcatlon would be printed before tho public could learn the truth. "I have been played up as a very wicked and perverted woman," said Miss McKinney, leanln1 forward in the dock. "I&. is not true." Readlna trom a folder ot white (See P~ON, -Pap A!) .. » DAILY PILOT H trowded Graves Charged NEWARK, N.J . CAP> A funeral director was accused by Ute atale of New Jersey today of orowdinl the remaln1 of 1,~l ln· '41.ntl and 1U1Jborn bable1 lnto ma11 1raves over a 8~·year period while under contract to New ark's Department of Welfare. Carmine Berardinelli was •hareed in an administrative complaint with burying as many as 40 infants in one casket. Tbe complaint also said that on at least 30 occasions he buried two caskets in single gravesltea at three New Jersey cemeteries. Berardinelli director o( the Berardinelli Funeral Home. is the second Newark mortician to be accused of performine mua burials or residents too poor to pay for their funerals. The 30-count complaint filed to- day by the stale Board ()f Mortuary Science is the first in.ep toward revocation of Berardinelli '11 morllclan's license in New Jersey. No criminal charges were filed. "Between February, 1967 and Au1ust, 1973, Berardinelll was entrusted by the city of Newark with the custody of 1,531 de- ceased individuals," the com- plaint stated. "Not one of these individuals was buried in a man· ner befitting the dignity or the de- ceased." The burials, for which the city paid Berardinelli, took place at Rosedale Cemetery in Linden, Woodland Cemetery in Belleville and HeavenJy Rest Cemetery in East Hanover, the complaint said. The board scheduled a hearing Dec 21 on the license revocation. Deputy Attorney General Charles J. Mysak, counsel to the board, said the mass burials were discovered as part of the board's investigation into the practic l' o f burying im · poverished residents. When asked 1( city welfare personnel. cemetery owners and workers might be implicated in the probe, Mysak would only say, .. The inve:.ligation is continu- ing." Newark funeral director Richard Iacobucci admitted burying the remains of 163 poor people in 32 graves at Heavenly Rest and Woodland cemeteries , while under contract to the city from 1973to1976. Iacobucci, who operated the Gunther Funeral Home here. bas been ordered by a Superior Court judge to disinter the bodies at his own expense and bury them ''with the dignity befltting the de· ceased." Iacobucci, whoe funeral dlrec· tor 's license was suspended last year, also was indicted by an Es. sex County grand jury on 163 counts of obtaining money under false pretenses from the city. E~ly Class Plan Weighed Huntington Beach CilY, (elementary) School District trustees are slated tonight to study a proposal to begin early kindergarten classes in district schools. The meeting wlll start at 7:30 p.m. at Peterson School, 20661 Farnsworth Lane. Administrators are recom· mending that children that reach the age or four years and nine months by February 1 be allowed to enroll in an early kindergarten class. Presently, children must reach that age by Sept. l to be admitted lo kindergarten. U.N. Bid Killed 1 UNITED NATIONS (AP) -A coalition of Communist, Arab, ind African naUona kllled a res· dlution Mon<lay calllnc for ap· t)ointment of a U.N . high com· diiasioner for human riebta. OftANGI COAl'T Mil' DAILY PILOT ' Oecern!>er I . tt77 Nothing Blg-t. Bad Luck Plague1 Firemen . . DELBARTON, W. Va. (AP) -Wrlte lt off as just a bad nlght tor the Delbarton Volunteer Fire Depart· ment. . Monday evening began with a call that a aasohne tanker was ubout to catch Cire in it nearby com- munity. After the firemen jumped on the town's new fire true k, they couldn't get it started. So they boarded the department's older truck, and things were just dandy until they got to a crossroads. . Despite nashing lights and a walllna siren, the fire truck collided with a pickup truck carrylna mall from Charleston. After checking to be sure no one was injured, the firemen and their truck rumbled on to its call. But the driver of the gasoline tanker, who turned in the alarm because the truck was smoking, told firefighters to forget about it. The smoke was coming from a jammed brake, he said. l'ro-.PageAJ PASSION ••• paper covered in handwritten notes, the doctor's daughter and one-time model said she ha• done voluntary work with deaf children and bas produced a television documentary on dru1 addicts. She said after she became In· . terested in the Mormon Church, because of a Mormon family she knew with 10 children which "had Jove and laughter," she enrolled at Brigham Young University in Utah, where she met Anderson. "My standards were quite high," Miss McKinney told the court. "I had had problems ln the past with boys who constantly tried to lake my virtue. I don't s moke or drink or use drugs. I· was looking for a boy who could read the Bible with me and have a family with me." But Miss McKinney said she became disillusioned at the uni- versity. "I was the ideal modern &irl at BYU. I wanted a temple mar· riage -a marriage Cor eternity." She said her female col· ' leagues, however, "drank and had pictures of nude boys on the wall. J didn't expect this at all. They were wolves. I was in a stale of cultural shock. I prayed for a very special boy who wouJd come into my life and that is where Kirk comes in." She said she met Anderson in July 1975in Provo, Utah, because she had a sports car and he want· ed lo drive it. "We stayed together all night," said Miss McKinney. "We found we had a lot in com- mon. He was willing to talk with me about the church but he also began talking of love and mar- riage immediately. ''I would like lo say he did not propose marriage to the car -he proposed marriage to me," she told the hushed, packed. courtroom. She said the couple even chose names for their future children and when she asked Anderson whether he could support her, she quoted him as responding: "Honey, I would work five jobs to support you." "To a woman this means something," the petite defendant said softly. "These are pretty heavy promises." She said the most Important commitment she made to An· derson was to give him her virtue. Rec ailing Anderson's earlier testimony at the bearing, Miss McKinney said: "Kirk tries to s a y I tempted him. He told Epsom police I was wearing a skin tight Jeopard 's skln jump- suit. I bad black jeans with a puffy-sleeved lop, which has . about aa much sex appeal as a potato sack. "Any physical desire I fell wu an indirect result of the 1reat spiritual and mental love I had for him, a love he encouraged," she added. "I cannot say I ever got any pleasure out of sexual relaUona with Kirk. I was too buay trytnc to satisfy him." May's attorney Robert An- drews said his client did not believe Anderton '1 detention wu a kldoap. but rather "a rescue from an _oppreaslve and tyran· or1anllatioo" -th• Mormon church -and that Jt WH neceuary for Anderson'• 1ood - and h1-llte. Miu McKlnney traced An· deraon to Eoatand tbrou1h private detectives and abe and May a.recharged with tatinf blm • to a lonely cotte1e near Okehanu>ton ln Devon. a COUD\>' in totatbwatEqland •. Andenoa te1Utled h• Wat ev .. maaUT abaclclild to a dOUbM beet with a 10..foOt cbalft ift4 forced. to have tntercoun• Uii'ie Uiner wltb Ml11 McJChulef ' IMitore Ji• .ventua1J7 blfl&lntd tor bl• releaae aft.er U.ree 4Qt bJ promlllal tom~ her. .. At tlmea you ma1 bave tb~ht tn u;e wt three dan there w&t an air ol w1ruJJtJ•lii the court Iii tbat it almOtt Mtmed lO be • locil Am«icu dame.do 1ltu1llOll," defenH ·~ ZJ. ltoCl told the maitltr•t•. "J'lila mUJt bi the molt amoa• J:Mlft .. • ~·-., llOrY OM bai Ma.rd fott maqyyears:"' Nativity Returned· To Play? More than 50 angry Aliso Elementary Scbool parent.<t con- fronted Princlpal Lyle Proctor Monday afternoon lo ask hlm why he pulled a three·mlnute Nativity scene from the South Lacuna school's Dec. 13 Cbrlatmaa play. And before the hour-long meet- inJ in the school cafeteria was over, parents had signed a peti- tion urging reinstatement of the Bethlehem scene, and suggested they will seek legal recourse to &et the manger scene back in the Yule play. "We were never told about this major (school district) policy change," said Vicki Regan, an Aliso School mother. "We've had the Nativity scene Cor years. It's a hisloricaJ and cultural scene - not religious,'' she said. But Proctor said his recom· mendatlon that the scene be pulled wu based on what he calls the religious connotation of the segment. l'roM Page Al HASSLE. • • other members or the 32·teacher staff at Dwyer. She also said she is considering le1al steps to halt' 'harassment" "I don't like this type of maneuvering," she •aid. "I'm not a politician. Things could be worked out ii we met them bead on." Dr. Bennie was recruited for lbe principal 's position which she assumed in September. She was a district coordinator in reading and language arts in a New York school district before coming to Huntington Beach. It was learned that one source of controversy was Dr. Bennie'• change In policy regarding goals and objectives to be written for the school year by teachers. A grievance previously waa tiled aaai.Mt the principal on that count. Another Issue reportedly cen- tered on the release of informa· lion regarding reading teat scores. Dr. Bennie said she directed that the Nelson readlni test be adminlstered for the /lrat Ume at Dwyer. She said that test showed that 201 up Us ol more than lhe 800 were two years or more behind grade level in reading comprehension and vocabulary. She said part of the teachers• discontent centered on her ef. forts lo up1rade reading abWUes. Trustees Monday afternoon first heard a iroup of seven Hunt· tngton Beach Elementary Teacher Aa1oclatlon represen-tatives. A member of that group said It represented lbe views of 28 facul- ty membera. 'rnntees then heard commenta from another sroup, apparently 1upport1ve of Dr. Bennie, and from a member of the public who bu cbUdten at the acbool~ Board Prealdent Brian GarJand aafd that the meeu.n, wa1 a "helptu.I dllcuolon that aided ln the 1atberinf of ln· !ormaUoa." Oilers St~e SCi-fi. • r Boy,·3, Saved by Trucker SALEM, Ill. (AP) -Emerson SmaJJey shrugs olf the praise from friends. saym1 anyone would have done the same. But police say that If It weren't for him. a 3-year-old boy would be dead. Smalley, 45, a driver for a local propane eu company, w11 croe1- in1 Brubaker Creek alone U.S. $0 at du1k Monday when he saw In his rellf'oviewmirror that a car careened over an embankment and into the water. "The car had floated under the bridge and to one side," said Smalley. He ran to the creek bank and was met by Brenda Stanlocd. 20. clutchlnl her ion. Travis, 1, and screamin& that her other boy was still in the submerged car. "I look off my coveraUs and boots," said Smalley. He waded into the water that was five to six feet deep. ·'There wasn't much of the car &howlng," he said. After several unsuccesatul al· tempts to locate ~he boy, Smalley summoned his son, Ed, 24, who had hurried over from his grandfather's home nearby. drawn by the headlights and commotion. "I'd been in there (the car) a couple times before," said the elder Smalley. "There was some clothing floating around In there, and every time I eot ahold of somelhine. I thought it was the child. You could hear him in there." Emerson Smalley held his son by the belt, and Ed groped In the watery darkness until he located little Troy Stanford and pulled blm free. Ed Smalley, Mrs. Stanford. from the tiny town ot Iuka, and her two children were under treatment for ex~ure today at Salem Memorial Hospital. Emerson Smalley said he went home after the rescue. "I never noticed the cold till after I got out -Ull I got lo the house and couldn't feel my feel or hands." He went to the hospital, was treated, then released. Bike Mishap h:tjures Boy A Fountain VaJJey boy is re- covering today from lacerations suffered Monday when his bicy- cle collided with a passing car and he was nuna to the pave· ment. Michael E. Burton, 14, of 17781 Santa Gertrude Circle, was treat· ed at Pacifica Hospital in Hunt· ington Beach for cuts lo his head, both hand.I, nose and the back of his heel. Police said the boy was riding westbound on Talbert Avenue near Bushard Street at 2:30 p.m. when the accident occurred. The driver of the car was identified by police as J . Hearty, 72, of 101 Roadrunner Lane, Fountain Valley. Planners to Meet . The Huntington Beach Plan- ning Commission will conduct a public hearing tonight on ways to spend $1.3 million in federal houslnr and community develop· ment fwids in the city. The. com- miHion will meet at 7 p.m . ln city council chamben;. ·~-· ....... ELIZABETH TAYLOR WINSOREATLADY AWARD SM Vlalta San Juan Hoapltal With Huaband John Liz Criticized By Puerto Ricans SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico CAP> -Irate female senatora criticized a ceremony al the Puerto Rican Legislature where actress Elizabeth Taylor UP· staged ei&ht other recipient& of F ..... rageAl BENEFITS. • Nashville Gas Company bas not merely refused to extend to women a ~nefit that men caMot and do not receive but has jm· posed on women a subslanUal burden that men need not suf. fer," Justice William H. Rehn- quist said for the court. The court sent back to lower federal courts two pregnancy benertt cases used to .reach today's decision, one from Ten- nessee and the other from California. While the action won unan- imous approval by the nine justices, four ot them voiced con· cern over the court's finding that the woman in the Tennessee case failed to prove an initial case of discrimination against her employer's sick-leave policy. The women in the two cases de- cided today won victories in lower court.s. Those victories were upheld as far as seniority benefits are concerned but now appear in jeopardy over thl!;ir sick-leave claims. ValieY;'s Band Wins Horwrs The Fountain Valley Hlgh School Marching band won top honors in the Lancaster Christmas Parade and Band Review held over the weekend. The ltz..member band won top. honors in both parade and fielc' competitions. The SO·membe1 drill team took third place in Jts ·separate competition. Student drum major John Hoefler woo third place in com· petltJon with other marchlne band leaden. A total of 26 school bands competed in the event Saturday. the 1977 ''Great Lady Award.'' • Miss Taylor and tbe eight Latin American women were rec- ognized by the legislature Mon· day. The nine women will receive the awards from the Americtt Women's Union tonleht. Following the ceremony at the Legislature, three women senators aot into a heated dis·· cussion with organizers of the event, claiming the other women had been icnored while attention was directed toward Miss Taylor, who was lo receive an award for civic work. "l am sorry that so many dis· linguished women have been in- vited here to ,give importance to only one of them," said Sen. Mercedes Torres. Another senator, Ruth Fernandez, who has a broken foot, stamped her crutches on the ground, and said: "The whole thing has been tactless." Sen. Celeste Benitez' nodded 1n agreement. Crash Kills Cycle Rider A 22-year-old La Mirada man died Monday night in Anaheim when the motorcycle he was rid- I n1 went out of control ancl crashed into a brick wall. Police said Gwllermo Sanchez Fuentes was westbound on NohJ Ranch Road Ju.st west of Rolling Hills Road when his motorcycle struck a curb and bounced into the wall. Fuentes died at 8 p.m. 1n Can· yon General Hospital after being taken there frorn the scene ofthe5 p. m. accident. SWISS S4NI'A. Rom BANK OETWIL AM SEE. Switzerland (AP> -A man in a Santa Claus suit walked into a bank In this northern Swiss village today, pulled a revolver out of his toy b•g and made of( with over $45,000, J>O!ice aald. fJ . -·. . . . '(/ WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS-- THE RESULTS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. Asshown-- 18 Karat Gold Cube Cluster Ring with • diamon'ds. By Lander, twice winner of the Oscar for jewetry design -the DeBeers Diamonds f nternetional Award '1155 127 Fashion Island: Newport Cent•r, Newport Beach Telephone~ (714) 6«;.()501 • • t 17 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO~NIA J TEN CE~?! • h Cou11 J}enies .P.negq;&ncy _ Sick Pai ~SHlNOTON CAP) - EmpJoyera may deny prepant work en s!cJc pay but (an not deny them senlorlty benefit.a during their pre&11ancy leave, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. In its aecond major decblon on pregnancy in a year, the court re- lied heavily on it.a prlor ruUni that denied women workers the rieht to have precnancy benefits included in an employer's health Irvine S•ashup insurance pro1ram. But the jultic:~ drew a dlJUnc· lion over seniority benefits, cit- ing a dirterence in "benefits" and "burdens." "Here, by compari•o&, the NashviJle Gas Company has not merely refused to extend to women a beneflt that tnen cannot and do not reeelve but bas im- posed on women > substanUal burden that men need not suf- fer," Justice Wllllam H. Rehn· qulst said for the court. The court sent back to lower federal courts twe pregnancy beneflt cases used to reach today's declsion, one rtom Ten- neuee and the other from California. While the action won unan- 1 mous approval by_ the nine justices. four of them voiced eon· cern over the court's finding that Three men in a pickup truck were injured and taken lo Tustin Community Hospital today after truck collided with a much larger tractor-trailer rig carrying a gravel load, in heavy fog on Culver Drive at Barranca Road. Two of the injured were identified as Irvine men. Nat Huebner and Michael Ecclestone, both 21. Third man was not immediately iden- tified. The gravel truck driver, also un - identified. was uninjured. Inflation Hits College Saddkback Construction Cost,s 'Doubling' By LAURIE KASPER Ol\lltOall.,l'l+etJtaft the woman lo the Tennea" cue railed to prove an lnlUaJ HM ol discrimination aialnst her employer'11iok-leave policy. The women lilt.be two ca1ee de- cided today woo victories ln lower court.. T!)ose vlctortea were upheld u far u Jeniorjty benefits are concerned but Qow appear in Jeopardy over their alc.k-leavc-ofalm1. Nora Salty worked fe>r the N11hvllle Gas Company for more than three ye1lra when she became pregnant ln 1972. Shed.ld not receive sick-leave beneftt.a durin& her materntty leave because col,1\P¥Y policy ex· eluded pregnanc~as an "Ulneas" covered by, the plan. When Mn. Sally was able to return to work, abe learned that h• job had been abolls}led and thlal sbe bad loat ffniol'ltj rtJht.a Bovan Slaying Trial to bid for another job within tbe compaQy. · SonJa Lynn Bora wu a te•cbeP ln Richmond, Calif., and the .. support ol her famUy when Ille became pre1nant. Sbe challen1ed lbe school board'• authority to tell her at what •tace 1n her precnancy she would DO loncer be able to wort and abe also sued t.oeoUect sldt pay. tseeBENEf'JT8, P•feAJ) ... . Pe~alty Challe~ge. BJ TOii .BAaLEY Ot .. OeHf ru..1utt A defense cballeni• to an Orange County Grand Jury in· dictment that aeekl the death penalty for the allege4 killer ot Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley was struck down today in Superior Court. 1 Judge Robert P. Kneeland ruled that tM death penalty will stand in the caae acainil Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, ot Huntiniton Beach, who pleaded not iuUty to all charges1t.oday. Fiori, who is being held In the county jail with ball denied, is Parents By STEVE MITCHELL Of•OellY"*'l&.tff identified by the prosecution u the man who pumped ninebulleta into Bovan lut Oct. 21 during a confrontctloft out.1de • Newport Beach rataurant. Judge Kneeland ordered bhn to io on trio Jan. 23 with lbtee arrested co·derendants: Alex- ander Kulik, 28, or NewpOrt Beach, AnthOtty Marone Jr., 23, and Ra,ymond Ruco, 28, boU1 ot Huntington Beach. A tlrth defendant, Joseph Davis, 28, was reported to be in Tokyo, Japan, today, awallinl a jet flleht that will land him In Los Aneelea tonight. CO/fee Cost OOirig Dmm, I NEW \'OJlJC (AP) - Coffee prices have taken another tumble at the wholesale level, but most of them are still over $3 a pound. Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter said he hopes to bave Davia ln the Oran1e County J., before midnight. Davis was arresWd in In· doneala last week. Three other persoDJ named ln the Grand Jwt indictment are still beine huntql in what are described u "overi seas" areu. ' All elcbt race chariea ot murder. conspiracy, extortion and robbery. Davis la identified as a former member or the Hare Krtahna - movement, a sect that has • (See DEATH, Pa1e A%) Manhole An Irvine Baocfl Water Dia· trict water valve cover that was filpped throueh the wlnd.sbJeld ot a c:ar may lead to a $35,000 law1ult agabut the dlstrlct anc1. the clty of lrvlne. Attorneys for Bertha A. • • • Saddleback Community College District's future building • 1 needs, esUmated to cost S1 million in today's dollars, could actually cost as much or more than $122 million in 10 years. .Even with this inflation, Lom- bardi said, the district should be able lo complete its projected con· struction if the district's lax rate remains unchanged. which is expected to grow in enrollment, should be met with the steady tax rate and increases in assessed valuation and state apportionment. MOfle than 50 anary Aliso Elementary School parents con· fron~ Principal Lyle Proctor Mo~day afternoon to bk hJm why. he pu111'd a three·tnlnUte NaUvlty scene Crom the South Lal'una school's Dec 13 Christmas play., General F'oods, the ria- li on 's lareest coffee roaster, announced Mon· day that it was reducina the price o! lta Maxwell House brand by 20 cents a pound. It was the sixth re- duction or tbe year and brought t.be price t-0 $3.21 a pound. Sanchez, 38, of Santa Ana, and her 4-year·old daughter, have filed clalm1 against both acen· . clea alie,tng the two were in· Jured' became the water valve cover wu neill1ently positioned in the street. . r r t "We all talk about inflation. Well , here i.s Inflation." said Superintendent Robert Lombardi 'in discussing the district's future building needs with trustees Mon- day. He said innat1on alone will cause construction costs to more than double lq 10 years. Construc- tion costing f1.5 million today will cost $18.3millionin 1987, Dr. Lom- bardi said. If the district's buildin' needs were spread evenly over tbe next ten years, with projects valued at Sl.S million In today's dollars built each year, the price would steadily rise. rnnation alone would cost the district about $47 rnJllion with the ten year total at $1:22 million, the superintendent sald. Irvine Tree Rite8 Set Next Sunday I A Christmas tree-lighting ceremony in tbe Irvine Vlllaae of W~odbrldte , originally an- nounced to be held this past Sun· dar, is scheduled for 4::W p.m. next Sunday instud. accordln1· to the homeowners •~sociaUon. The ceremony is off Barranca Pa~kway between Culver Drive and Jeffrey lload. I ·~°"II toOl"Ut eqnnot qwnch ~ nor can /toodf cf7'0Wft U." He said the district could finish its building program within the next decade it it continues to spend 37 cents of its 95-cenl lax rate on construction. At this rate, and cons1denng declining increases in the as- sessed valuation, the district could raise almost $152 million for construction alone by 1987, he said. Lombardi said increased operating expenses of the district, Additionally, be said, construe· lion may cost the district less ti the state's share of construction costs increases. Last year, the state's share of the district's building cofta was about nine percent, sald Dr. Edward Hart. uslatant superin· lendent for general development. But his.year, becauseofincreued enrollments, thestate'stharebas been raisedto23percent, be said. <See FUTURE, Page A!) Survey Determines Teen Center Play Irvine teenagers like to play pool, air hockey and ping pon1. They hardly like chess and ap· ·parently detest card games and backgammon. They like volleyball twice as much as they like sortball ,and basketball, but Ukloae laat two gamea three Um more than waterpoJo. Bowling ls betl than soccer and golf combln , teenaaers say. Those are aome of the results of a summer·lon& survey conducted by Irvine Hillf School volunteers, to find 0\11 rial thin&s cjty youths would like included In youth services center programs. A report baaed on the survey results of 184 students will be pre- sented the community services commission at a 7:30 p.m. meet- in1 Wednesday at city ball. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. The survey also showed that teens would be Interested in claase1 In woodworklnc, selt- defense and ceramk•. There was high interest in scuba instruction, with 45 per· cent of the students ravqting it. Auto repair also won hlth marks, with a 32 percent intereal ralin1. AlmOll no one wu interested in classes in bicycle safety. Ahcl before the hour-toni meet.- ing in the school cafeteria WU oyer, pareilla b•d slgned a peU- ti()n urging reinstatement o( the Bethle6em acene, and su11ested they wUJ seek le1al recourse to get the manger acene back 1n the yure play. "We were never told about this major (school dlltrlct) policy change," aald Vicki Re1an, an Allio School mother. '\We've had the Nativity scene for years. It's a bl.s(Qrtcal and cultural saene - not relllioua," she •aid. But Proctor satd bia recom· meodat,lon ttiat Lb• -.cen• be pulled w., based on wl)at he callJ the rellstous connotalloo of the seiment. "l~ miibt seem a contracllcU01J to be able tO tine 'Away in • Manaer','1 but not to be able to ba\'e a NaUvlty scene,'' Proctor told tt,e p-.rents. • '1'be at~\e Educauon Code~ .. Y we may use lhl\llOlll~" But, he satd. the reconunendJ· tion that~ m_.,cer 1ceoe be cut waa bued on what he called •tlpuJatlons urider the U.S. Copttltutlon, the California Constltuttoo, and tbe state•• EducutooCode. "Oftlclat1 in tbe Newport .. Men, Tuatlo. and Norwal~ school dlltrlcta an aal<\ ln ~ lnterpretaUon or th9 • code that ther' wiU ~ no rtUstoua scene& or aymboll and um t1 th• tt~ (he~nvRY,r.,•.u>.,. At the retJil level, 11pot cbecl(uh<>w a pound of rei· ular grpund coffee general· ly 18 selling at from $J.29 to $3.69 a pound, about $1 q>or-e.than lL eo1t a1 th' start or 1977, but abou( $1 len than lt wu ln the sprin1 when prices reached re· cordhlghJ, Youth Hurt In Canyon Crash Dies A claJm II the fint of lepl pro- cedures leadlnt to a lawsuit. The lrvl.ne City CounaU bu denied responslbWty tor the accideat; the water district took the aame adion Monday. Mrs. Sancli~ claims that on ~ Au1. $ she was drivint with hv dauahter along Red Hill Aveaue when the accident occurn.l at tbe totersectlon witb )(~Gaw Aveope. Slat tald the car in trosit of ber · 11trucl the valve cover lbat wu in IUCb J)OllUoo U to be '1lppe4 Into.the air by the car'1 rear tlre. The steel cover aaUed lnto her car's ~Id, th•tlelinl lt. . The cover itself •truck nett.her occup•nt, bUt shardl of &1us caused neck. •~alder and e)'8 ln~ JurJet to the·patr, accord.ins &o the damaee claim. • ' DAJl Y Pll01 SALEM. Ill <AP> -Emtnan SmaJley sbrucs otr the pralae from friends, uy1na anyone would havf" done the same Bul })Qlice HY that if it weren'l tor hlm, a 3-yea.r-old boy would be deld Smalley, 45, a driver for a local propane gas company, was cross· wg Brubaker Creek alonr U.S. ISO 1l dun MCllid WIMd ~ u• a bu rear·tlewJDinos' that a tar c1ar ed over aa emb&nkmeAt 11nd lolothewater. ·'The car had Ooated under t.ho bridt• and to one side.•• 1aid Smalley. He ran to the creek bank and w11 met by Brenda Stanford, 20, ,Nothing Right rtBad Luck Plaguea Firemen DELBARTON W.Va. (AP} -Write it off as just· a bad night for the' Delbarton Volunteer Fire Depart· menl. tin Monday evening began with a call that.a gaso e tanke r was about to catch fire in a nearby com- m unity. • fl After the firemen jumped on th~ town s new re t ruck thcv couldn 'l gel 1l sta rted. s~ lh~y boarded the department's older truck. and things \\ere J usl dandy until they got to a cross road!,. Ocspill' fl ashing lights and a wailing si_ren, th.e fire truck collided with a pickup truck carryang mail from Charleston After checking lo be sure no one was injured, the firemen and their truck rumbled on to its call. But the driver of the gasoline tanker, \fbo turned in the alarm because the truck was smoking, told firefi g hters t o forget about i~. The s moke was coming from a jammed brake, he said. ,.,..,.. Page Al PASSION TOLD ••. public could learn the truth. "( have been played up as a ve ry wick ed and perverted woman,·· said Mi ss McKinney, leaning forward in the dock. "It is not true ... .Re ading from a folder oC white ,>aper covered in handwritten ,ates, the doctor's daughter and lne-ltme model said she has :Jone voluntary work with deaf children and has produced a ... elevision documentary on drug addicts. She said after she became in- terested in the Mormon Church, oecausc of a Mormon family she knew with 10 children which "had love and laughter." she enrolled at Brigham Young UOiiversity in Utah, where she met Anderson. "My s tandards were quite tugh," Miss McKinney told the court. "I had had problems in the past with boys who constantly tried to take my virtue. 1 don't smoke or drink or use drugs. I was looking for a boy who could read the Bible with me and have a family with me." But l\1iss McKinney said she became disiJJusiooed al the unJ . versity. "I was the ideal modern girl at RY U. I wanted a temple mar- ria ge a marriage for eternity." She said her female col- leagues. however, "drank and h~d pictures or nude boys on the w .. 11. I dldn't expect thls at all. They were wolves. I WJlS in a state or cultural shock. I prayed for a very special boy who would come into my JHe and that is where Kirk comes ln." She said she met Anderson in July 1975 in Provo, Utah, because &he had a sports car and he want- ed to drive it. ''We s tayed together all night." said Miss McKinney. "We found we had a Jot In com· mon. He was willing lo talk with me about the church but he also began talldng or love and mar- riage immediately. "I would Uke lo say he did not propose marriage to the car -he proposed marriage lo me," she told the hushed , packed courtroom. She sald lbe couple even chose names ror their future children and when she asked Anderson whether he could support her, ;he quoted htm as respondl.nl: "Honey, J wo\lld work five Jobs to iupport you." "To a woman this means 1omethin1," the petite defendant. 0,.A .. Ql COAST DAILY PILOT said softly. "These are pretty heavy promises." She said the most important commitment she made to An· derson was to live him her virtue. Recallinr Anderson's earlier testimony at the hearing, Mias McKinney said· ''Kirk tries to say I tempted him He told Epsom police 1 was wearing a skin liJiht leopard's skin jump- suit l had black jeans with a pufCy-sleeved lop, which has about as much sex appeal as a potato sack ''Any physical desire I fell was an inqirect result or the great spirHuaJ and mental love I had for him , a love he encoura1ed," she added "I cannot say I ever got any pleasure out of sexual relaUons with Kirk I was too busy tryinr to satisfy him " May's attorney Robert An - drews said his client did ool believe Anderson's detenUon was a kidnap, but rather "a rescue from an _ oppressive and tyran- org a nization" -the Mormon church -and that It was necessary for Anderson's good - and his life. Miss McKinney traced An- derson to England through private detectives and she and May are charged with taking blm to a lonely cottage near Okehampton ln Devon. a county in southwest Englan~. Anderson testified he was eventually shackled lo a double bed with a 10.foot chain and forced to have intercourse three limes with Miss McKinney before he eventually bargained for his release after three days by promaing to marry her. "At limes you may have thought in the last three days there was an air of unreality in the court in that it almost seemed to be a local American dome1tic situation," defense attorney El· grod told the magistrate!. "Thi.a must be the most amazing noo- kidnap story one bas heard for many years." Liz's A.cti.oru Criticized by PuBrto Ricana SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP> -Irate femala senators criticised a ceremony at the Puerto Rican Legislature -be.re actreH Ellsabe&.b T•ylot Up· staged ~t «her reclp1~ of the 1977 ''Gnat Lady Awvd.t llJ•• T,ylor aod the elfhtLaUn ArnJrican women 1HH rec· oanliect b1 the leciatature lllOf\· day. Thi Dine 'fl'_QJlleD Yil1 reeetve tht awll'ds frtiin;tbt American Women'1U~~t. • • elutdilitJ bet ibn, Tl'avtl. 1. and acrHmlna that bet other bOy was 1Wl in tQ aubmersect car "t t~ ofr my coveralls and boots,' said SmaUey. He waded tnto lbe water that was flvoto1ixfeetdee_p. "There wasn't m\lch of the car show inc," be said. Arter several Wl&uccesafuJ 1t. Approval Sought/or 46 Condos Irvine housing developers wUJ seek approval to build 46 con- dom in l u ms in Woodbrldee Village, and approval for pre- liminary site plaiu of nearly 900 apartments and houses in Turtle Rock, at a planning commission meeting tonight. • The commission meets al 7:30 in council chambers at city ball 17200 Jamboree Blvd. · ' The Woodbrid~e 011e-to lhree-bedroom condominiums would be built on six acres at Ashwood and W OO<J.sprinJ. Plallning Direc- tor Eddie Peabody Jr. recom- mends that t,he units, gro\lped two to four W1its per buUdlnt, be approved. The Turtle Rock homes are be- ing built by the Irvine Company. Preliminary site plans were re- viewed last month by the com- rnlssion, which d~layed approval until certain or the hilltop homes were redesigned so they wouldn't block views. F,.._PageAJ FUTURE •.• Under lhe state'a "crazy Corm ula," Lombardi said, the dis- trict may receive from 40 to 50 percent of its construction costs from the slate in the future. The superintendent said he dld not consider lhe state Cundtng in his lnnauon proje~Uons because "I'm presenting the worst." Larry Taylor, board president, asked if it wouldn't be better for the district to pass a bond election and speed up the building pro- gram to avoid some of the lnfla·. tionary costs Noting that bonds require in- terest, trustee Norrisa Brandt said, "You probably still have to pay in the final analysis." Lombardi added that ac- cele rating the bulJdlng pro- gram would not accelerate the state aide program. Hart told trustees that, accord· ing to state formulas, the college district currenUy is about 10 per- cent "underbuilt." After the dis· tricl builds the first phase ol the new northern campus and a $5.5 million classroom building on the maln caau>us, he sald, it probably still wlU be uoderbuilt. The admlnstrator said this ls because Saddleback enrollment is lncreaslng while other districts in the state are losing students. F,.._PageAI NATIVITY. • t.as pta to locate tho t>oy, Smalley 1umtnoned biJI son, Ed, 2•. who bad hurried over rrom hi• grandfather's home nearby, drawn by the headligbls and commotion. "I'd been in there (lhe car) a couple times before," sald the elder Smalley. "There was some clothing floating around ln there, and every Ume 1 eol abold of sometbinl, 1 tbou1ht lt was tho child. You could bear b.lm in there." Emerson Smalley held his son by the belt, and Ed croped in the watery darkness until he located· little Troy Stanford and puJled him free. Ed Smalley, Mrs. Stanford, from the tiny town of Iuka, and her two children were under treatment for exposure today at Salem Memorial Hospital. Emerson Smalley said he went home after the rescue. "I never noticed the cold till aft.er l got out -till I cot to the house and couldn't feel my feet or bands." . He wenl to the hospital, was treated, then released. A report at llUnola State Police headquarters ln Efrinabam slat.es, "Tbls would have been a fatal accident except tor this motorlat. '1 o.i ................. ROBERT AND NANCY WINGO AT WORK ON NOVEL Mlaalon Viejo Couple'• 'Experiment' P•Y• Off ' Couple Write Book Yzejo Pair Peh Novel A.bout Airlines 1 By WILLIAM HODGE . OIJlll Delly NeC la.tt It started out the way 10 many great. ldeas do -over drinks and boisterous atocytelllnt. But Milalon VleJo residents R•bert and Nancy Wtn10 were convinced lbe stories they heard contained tbe stuff of areat. uteratu.re. Or, ».t the least, enter- taining reading . So t,he two airline employee. decided to write a book. •'When we started lbia project we expected to put it out in two weeks," Wingo, an Air CaUromla captain, recalled of the couple's decision to write a novel about an airline pilot. "It took us two years before we finally got it into draft form," Nancy Wingo conressed. "We didn 'l know what we were facing so we took it step by step. "We just kept stumbling along until we got where we are now." But the road to publication or "Charley Potata 's" -scheduled for release in two weeks -wasn't without its own set of bizarre and humorous occurrences. When the couple began the the project they hired a court re- porter to transcribe tapes of airline storytelling sessions with their friends in aviation. ··when we put it on paper it was all unintelligible Jibberish," said Mrs. Wingo, a United Airlines stewardess. "It was almost impossible to undentand even for her (the transcriber).'' . Part or the transcription's problem evolved from the reauJar drawbacks ot recorded conversa- tion. ·'The voice on the tape would say 'This big' and we were ask- ing ourselves 'How big is that?'." Mrs. Wingo explaJned, gesturing around an lmaeinary object with her hands. ''There was so much lost between the actual conversa- tion and the tranacriptlon., ''And the tape had all kinds ol 'you knows' on it,'• Wlnto added. The couple junked the transcription idea and decided to begin writing dilferent stories and piecing them together. "We had to make It up and piece it together so ft would seem real," Mrs. Wingo explained. "When you first WTlle it all down it comes out so choppy. "We rewrote it so often I was aick of lt." And there were spelling prob- lems. "Our spelling 1'a.s so bad there were limes we couldn't flnd word.a in the dictionary," Mrs. Wingo recalled la\llbiftily. Tbe couple persisted ll,\d final· ly produced a manwscri_pt. Then, the long search !or a put>Usber began. • "We sent the manuscript to 12 publishers," Mrs. Wingo said. "About half of them were saying to return the book nelCt year. They said they already had all their tiUes for this year." ··we were getting pretty dis- couraged, .. her husband re- called. "We finally found a publisher in Fallbrook who said F,.._PageAJ DEATH ... figured prominently ln police in· vestigation of what ofrlcers say is an intemat.ional drug distribut- ing ring centered in Orange County. Davis, three fugitives and Kulik are identified by tbe pros- ecution as principals in the operation o! Prasadam Dis- tributors, Inc., a comp•ny al- legedly linked to the Hare Krishna movement. Pretrial action against the Cour arraigned defendants bas been scheduled for Dec. 16 and 19 and Jan.16. Kulik, Marone and Resco are free on bail . Fiori's lawyer told Judge Kneeland today that he wlll seek. his client's freedom on bail dur- ing tbe Dec. 19 bearing. Def ease lawyers said they in- tend to seek separate trials for their clients, an as yet. un- scheduled motion tbat wlll be op- posed by prosecutor Carter. the book was sellable but too ris· queforblm." Fmally, the couple's aovel was accel)ted by ExposlUon Press of New York. They dldo't teatke the extent or their accompliJh- ment unW they toured the pteas backeasL t•we went back to New York and toured the plJuit," Wingo ex- plained. "They have a whole warehouse of manuscripts they've turned down." But the Wlngos' novel -pat- terned after the experiences. or one of captain Wingo's fellow Air California pilots-was accepted. While the couple has sc.he®)ed an autocraphing session Dec, 17 at B . Oalton /Plckwlck Booksellers In South Coast Plaza, neither 1s predicting Instant suc- cess for their first writlne en- deavor. · · l think everyone who writes a book hopes it wiH become a best- seller," Wingo admitted. "Un- less it's a tremendous best seller - you don't make much money ,00 mos tly it's authors with a name who make it. "But authors do have something lhal's almoat lm· mortal," be continued. "How many people actually do get a book published.'' Fro-Page AJ BENEFITS. • Rehnquist, referring to the court's deci!1lon last Dec. 7 in a case Involving the GeneraJ Elec; tric Company, said the ''poUcyof not awarding sick-leave pay to pregnant employees is legally in· • distlngulshable from the diaabili· ty Insurance program upheld" in ; theGEcase. In the GE case, the justices ·voted 6·3 that pregnancy dis· cr imlnaUon is not necessarily il· • legal discrimination based on 1 sex. Thatdeclsion, llketoday•s, was based on the court's interpret.li· ti on of the Cl vii Rights Act of 1964 • and other federal Jaws concern-, ing job discrimtolltlon. ' .. H. WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELER~ TH£. RESUL.TS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. ' Asshown-- 18 Karat Gold Cube Cluster Ring with · diamonds. By Lander, twice winner of the Oscar for jewelry design -the DeBe~rs Diamonds International Award s11ss - I ! VOL. 70, NO. 3,0, 3 sec WASHINGTON (AP) - Employers may deny preenant workers sick p4ly but cannot deny them seniority benefi'-5 durlng their pregnancy leave, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. In Its second major decision on pregnancy in a year, the court re· lied heavily on lta prl4)r ruling that denied women workers the right to have preenancy benefits included in an employer.'• health Parents Demand Nativity By SfEVE MITCHELL Ol IM o.lly ...... Jtaff More than 50 angry Aliso Elementary School parents con· fronted Principal Lyle Proctor Monday afternoon to ask him why he pulled a three.minute Nativity scene from the South Laguna school 's Dec. 13 Christmas play. And before the hour· long meet- ing in the school cafeteria was over, parents had signed a peti· lion urging reinstatement of the Bethlehem scene. and suggested they wUI seek legal recourse lo get the manger scene back in the y ule play. "We were never told about this major (school district> policy change," said Vicki Regan, an Aliso School mother. "We've had the Nativity scene for years. It's a ht.toricaJ and cultural scene - not religious," she said. But Proctor said his recom- mendation that the scene be puUed was based on what be caJls the religious connotaUon of the segment. "Jt might seem a contradlctJon to bt able to alna • A•81 tn a ·Manger'," but not to be able to have a Nativity scene." Proctor told the parents. ''The state Education Code does say we may use that song." But, he said, the recommenda· tion that the man1er scene be cut was based on what he called stipulations under the U.S. Conslltulion, the Callfornia Constitution and the state'a Education Code. Sl'OCKS FALL; DOWLOSESl4 NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices tumbled today under sell· ing pressure blamed partly on the dollar's continued slump in farefgrl exctiange markets. . The Dow Johes average of 30 Industrials was down lt.12 poirits to&oe,&l. Losers swamped gainers by a S-1 ntargin among New York Stock Exchange-Hated issues. (Tables, All> ' lAluraoce Pf'Oll'am. But &.be Justkes hew a fiatinc· Uon over seniority benefits, cii, inl a difference ••benefits" and "burdens!' ''Here, by comparl100, the Nasbvllle Gu Company bas n~ merely refuaed to Htend to ·women a beoetlt thal trien cannot ancl do DOt reeeive b\11 bas im· l)Ole4 oo iiomen a $Ubstanti.&1 bw-den that men need not suf. fer," Juatlce WUliam H. Rehn- quist a aid rot tM cotirt. The court sent back to lower federal co\ll"ls two preenancy benefit cases uaed: to reaeb today's decision, one from Ten- nessee and the other trbm Callfomla. Wblle ~ action won WWl· lmou1 approv~I by the nine juallces, four of them vqlced eon· cem ewer the court 'a tmdinr tbat Out of tlae Mines Coal miners exit thro~h the main shaft of the Bullitt ?&ne in A.pl)alacMa. v,., after completj.ng thelr fegular shift, and they won't be back very soon. ~r 13,000 • miners in Virginia were honoring tl\e strike called bY the Unlted Mlri~ Workera. Story, Pase A4. Services Scheduled For Stabbing Victim M emorlal services have been scheduled for Wednesia1 aft.er. noon ln Corona del Mar lor 21- year·old John Hagan 'fl'Jk> was st..tbbed to death Ws we.tend in a park near Hol>olulu. Meanwhile the young man's al· le&ed assailant, Roeer Kuehnau, 34, of Honolulu, wu slated for ar- ralgnment todu in Honolulu oo a manilauibt.er charae. Kue'1tl.au was arrellLed soon after the ~Dll del Mar man was stabbed aeveral tlme. dur- lnt a acuffle ~ a ~acb park about 30 milet from Honolulu. The ~~~t fa bein1 held oo $10,000 ~alter he was formally cbar1ed in the case Monday ntgbt. Police say the youl.h had been camping at the p•rk for about three weeks and apparently believed Kuehnau was reaponai· ble lor the theft ol bl.a campin1 gear. . . The stabbing aUeeedJy oc· curred when Haian conlroh'ted Kuehnau and his 19.year-old brother·in·Jaw. Police have re- fused to release the name of the br.other·ln·law because h• has not been charaed wit.b a crime. Ha1an, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hagan of 3007 Harbor View Drive, wu a lont·time CorOba del Mar reaident wbo al· tended Harbor View Elemetit.ary School, Uncotn Middle School and Corooa del Mar RJ1h Sebool. Services will be conducted at 2 <See JUTES, Pase A2 > the women in the Tennessee cue failed CO prove an lniUal cue of discrim.JnaUon aealnst her . employer'• gick-leave poUcy. The women in lbe iwo casea de· clded today won victories in lower courts. Those victories were upheld as far H seniority benefits are concemed but now appear in jeopardy over tbelt slck·leave claJm1. Nora SaUy worked for tbe By TOM BARLEY °' .. o.11, ..... 14Mf A def ease challenge to an Oran1e CoUnty Grand Jury tn. dlctment that seeks the death penalty for the alleged killer of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain YalJey waa struck down today in Superior Court. Judge Robert P. Kneeland ruled that the death penalty will stand in the cue agaln1t Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, or Huntington Beach, who pleaded not guilty to all charges today. Flori, who ls belog held in the county Jail with .ball denied, ls * * * By IOANNE REYNOLDS OIU.o.llJP\ltt,.... Clalmi.og God's name is not subject to trademark laws, a spokesman for Govlnda's Restaurant in La1una Beach Monday said the business will fieht a federal suit pending aeainstit. The suit was flied last week by the International Society for Kriabna Conaclousoeu (ISKCON) which clatms to hold a serviceman to the name Govin· da. Tb• suit. alleats that the reatalU'ant at 1750 S. Coast Hl11tway misappropriated tbe name. Tbe legal acUon wa1 seen as an attempt by tbe JSKCON hierarchy to diaas$0Ciale the sect from the four indMduaJs named ln the multiple criminal indict· menta stemmln1 from tbe murder of Stephen John B.ovan. Bovan. 36. of Fouqtain Valley dled Oct. 22 when be wa1 shot nine Umes while leavlns another restaurant la NewPOtt Beach. Four of the eieht people tod.lct· ed In that ease were at one time a11ocla*91 with or members of London 'Pa8sion 1i-rial' Ordered LONDON (AP) -Former American beauty queen JoYce McKinney wu ofdered by a magistrates' court today to stand Coast Weather Falr throuah Wednes· day. Lowe tonl1ht ln mld·50I. H1IM Wed.0"4~ 75to8.3. . tt." He added lb•t althouah thole words were writt.n 2,000 yean aaotheyueatruetodiy a1tben.· Followtna the maatatrates' d• clalon that tbe palr would at.add trlal. Mila McKinney toot the witness stand for the f\nt tlme and told the court: .. I would like to thank you so much for glvlna mt the .op- portunity to speak. I have ti"eeft trJ(g for ~ montba to 1et word.to the outalde world. l was In areat fear lhal Kirk An· deraoll'I ll~• and fabtlcation would bt printed before the pobllc coUld learn the truth. .. I have beea play~ up u a very wlcked and perverted woqian," satd Mil.I McKia.Dey, lea.alng forward .lD the dock ... It iln~true.'' Jtea<\Jq from a folder of white <See PASSION. Pace A!) Nashville Gas Company for m()('e than three years when abe became pre~ant in ltr2. Sbe did not re~lve sick-teave beoetits durini her maternlty leave because company policy ex- cluded preg-nancy as an .. Ulneu" covered by th~ plan. When Mrs. Satty waa able to return to work, she learned that her j<>J> bad been abolished and that afte had Jost seniority rtahts tbe Lasuna ~Hare Xrilbb& Temple. The four, Alexander Kulik, Roy Christopher Richard, Joseph Fedorowskl and J08eph Davis Ill, were partners in a To'day'• <!lo l•I N.Y.Stoeks S4nJa i.Yrtt Bet( was a teacher ln RleJunond, Callf .• and the aoJe support of her f amlly wben •he became pregnant. She chaUeneed the school board'• authority to tell her at what atqe ln her pre~y abe wn&d no loncer be ·able to work and lbe a1ao 1ued to eoJlect sick pay. Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter said be hopes to have Davia in the Orange County Jail before mblnlgbt. I Davis was arrefted In In· done.la last week. Three other persons named in the Grand Jury indictment are stlll being bunted in what are described es •1over· seas"areu. All ei&ht race chariea of murder, conspiracy, extortloo. and robbery. Davia la ldenutied u a former member of the Hare Krishna movement. a sect that baa ('See DEAm, Pa1e AZ> * LB Crash Victim Steven Dave Swearingen, IOO of Saddleback College bead foot- ball coach Ka Sweariftlen, died Monda)' afternoon u a result ot lnjurla be received ln a alngle- car crash on La1una Canyon Road Sunda)' evenina. Tbe 19·year·old Saddleback Collece student body vice preal· dent wu proDOUDced dead at Saddleback Community ~pital Monday, Jesa Ulan ~houri after his small sport.a car careened off the roadway a mile and a ctuarter east ot El Toro Road. Police said Swearinfen of 888 Summit Way, Lacuna Beach, passed several slower moWic can 1ot.ng out the can)'OD road at about 8:45 p.m. Sunday, and •J>- parenUy lost control of tbe •mall. sports car when be returned to hit own lane. By WILLIAM HODGE Of• o.lty ......... ll at.a.rted out the way 10 many great Ideas do -over drinks and boisterous atorytellJng. But Mlaslon Viejo residents Robert and Nancy Wlngo were convl.oced the storte1 they beard contained the stuff of 1reat literature. Or, at the le .. t, enter· talnlng reading. So the two atrllne employees decided to write a book. ''When we st.arted this project we expected to put it out in two weeks," ~o, an Air California captain, recalled Qt the couple's dectaion to write• novel about an airline pilot. "It took ua two years before we floaJly got It lnto dt'llt form." Nancy Wlhco confessed. "We dldn't know what w& wereJacins so we~ it step by itep. "We just·kept stumbling alona untu we got where we are now." NB Man Released On Bail After Raid A Newport Beach man, arrest· ed t.h1s weekend durins ~ series ot raJds aimed at uncovering al· leged illegal gambling opera· lions, is free from custody today a!\er posting S2.SOO bail. Anthony Edward Pappes, 42. was arrested Saturday on a charge of possession of a sawed· off shotgun, which police allege they found in his home atJU4 W. Ocean Front. The home was searched as ~~"·"~-~,,.,. ... , part of a series of gynchronized raids that took place in six states as 'part of a Cive·monlh-old probe A,. Wire .... TELLS OF PASSION Joyce McKinney of an illicit betting ring. . The investigation was or· ganized b7 the Phoenix, Ariz., Police Department's Organi&ed F.._P.,,eAJ PASSION TOLD ••• paper covered in handwritten notes, the doctor's dauibter and one·llme model said she has done voluntary work with deaf children and has produced a television documentary on drug addicts. She said after she became in· terested in the Mormon Church, because of a Mormon family she knew with 10 children which ''had love and laughter," she enrolled at Brigham Young University in Utah, where she met Anderson. "My standards were quite high," Miss McKinney told the cotirt. "l had had problems in the past with boys who constanUy tried to talce my virt\ie. I don't s moke or drink or use drugs. I was looking for a boy who could read the Bible with me and have a family wilhme." But Misa McKinney said she became disillusioned at the uni· versity. "I was the ideal modern girl at BY U. 1 wanted a temple mar· r1age · a marriage for <>lerni ty." · She .isaid her female col·' leagues, however, "drank and had pictures of nude boys on the wall. J didn't expect this at all. They were wolves. I was ln a state of cultural 1hock. I prayed for a very special boy who wooJd come into my life and that ls where Kirk comes in.•' She said she met Anderson in July 1975 in Provo, Utah, because sh4' had a aporta car and be W&fll· ed to drive it. "We s tayed together all ni1ht," said Miss McKinney. "We found we had a lot in co~· mon. Ke was willing to talk with me about the church but be abo beaan talking of love and mar· riate immediately. ''I would like to say he did not propose marriage to the car -he proposed marrla1e to me," abe told the buabed, packed courtroom. She said the couple even chose names for their futuH children an'\ when ehe uked Anderson wyther he could support her~ •ht quoted bJm aa responding: "Honey, I would work ftve Jobi to sur.portyou." 'To a woman tbla means something," the petJte defendant , °"ANM COAIT N DAILY PILOT said softly. "These are pretty heavy promlses." She said the most important commitment she made to An· derson was to give him her virtue. Recalling Anderson's earlier testimony at the heaMng, Miss McKinney said: "Kirk tries to say I tempted him. He told Epsom police I was wearing a skin tight leopard's skin jump- suit. I had black jeans with a puffy-sleeved top, which bas about as much sex appeal u a potato sack. "Any physical desire I felt was an indirect result of the great spiritual and mental love I had tor him, a love he encouraged," ahe added. "I cannot say I ever got any pleasure out of sexual relations wltb Kirk. I was too busy trying to satisfy him.'' .May'a attorney Robert An· drews said bis client did not believe Anderson's detention was a kidnap, but rather "a rescue from an_ oppressive and tyran· . organization" -the Mormon church -and that it was necessary for Anderson's good - and his life. Miu McKinney traced An- derson to England through private detedives and she and May are charged with taking him to a lonely cottage near Okebampton In Devon, a count,y In southwest England. Anderson testified he was eventually shackled to a double bed with a 10-foot chain and torced to have intercourse three times with Miss McKinney before he eventually bargained for his release after three days by promising to marry her. "At times you may nave thought in the Jut three days there wu an air of unreality in the court in that it almost seemed to be a local American domestic situation," defense attorney El· grod told the magistrates. ·'This must be the m<>1t amazJ.ns non- kldnap story one bu beard for many years." Parks Panel Plans Project Priorities tor improvlnt para in Newport Beach will be dls· cu11ed at a meeUns of the cl~ Parka, Beaches and Rttrta CommllslQD toni@t. The mftllns wUl betJ,n at 1: so· In city CQGDCil ohamben. Cal Stewart. PB and a· dJ.tec. tor; uJd comm!Qioaera wlll ~ cuu priodtta foi new •Priiiklir ayate.JDI IQd the addtUc:Ki to partca of tacill11M such u teM1J eou.rta. Tb• ~ommlulon wll1 flnallze tta DTiorltl• at ltl Dec. 20 mMUDI. StewarttilcL Crime and Special lnveaUgation Bureau whose spokesman, Sgt. Howard Hunt~r. said more raids and arrests are anticipated. He did not elaborate. According to Hunter, the searches were carried out In Newport Beach, Phoenix, Lu Vegas, Mlnneapolls·Sl . Paul, Muskogee, Okla., and Spencer, Iowa. , Hunter said he la not prepared to diM\ISS the item.1 seized in the searches. Sgt. John Simon of. the Newport Beach Police Depart· ment alleged gambling materials were found in Pappes' home. Hunter also declined to com· ment on the 1lze and sco~ of the operaUon under investigation. "That's ooe ot the reasons we got the search warrants," be said. "We wanted to get an idea of bow big this thing is." OZ4RK C1IA.IRS MADE TO L.4Sr Charles Christian and Jack Mccutcheon make chairs. But the way they make chairs ls as old as the Ozark hills that sur- round them. They use no nails, screws or glue to hold them together yet no chair has ever been returned for repair. For a modern story by Jules Loh on ancient craft, see PageAlO. EroaaPageAJ DEATH •• ·• figured proD:iineQtly in pol~ in· vestlgation oC what officers say is an international d.ru& distribut· ing ring centered In Orange County. Davia, three fugitives and Kulik are identified by the pros- ecution as principals In the operation of Prasadam Dis· trlbutors, Inc., a company al· legedly linked to the Hare Krishna movement. Pretrial acUoo against the four arraigned defendantl has been scheduled for Dec. 16 and 19 and Jan.16. Kulik, Marone and Resco are free on bail. Fiori's lawyer told Judge Kneeland today that be wnr seek. his client's freedom on bail dur- ing the Dec. 19 bearing. Defeme lawyers said they in· tend to seek separate trials tor thelr cllent1, an as yet un- scheduled motion that will be op- posed. by proMC?utor Carter. If the lbot.lons are iranled by Judge kneeland, it could m~ aa many u four separate trials in January and a total of eight separate trtall if and when all the defendants are in custo<ly. 'ro.PafleAI SUIT ••• Davil, the owner or Govibda's, 111 currenUy being brought to Oran1e County from Jakarta, In· don ea la. Monda)', Peter Reinholdt, whose Kindu name ia Pad·· na1erbha DM, called the Daily Pilot to aay the reataurant would flsbt the a ult. 't-rberefore, we, \.be servants or Govlnda refuse to partatre in IIKCON's attempt to limit God to belne a trademark." Reinholdt dtd acree with the contenUon oC the JSKCON of- ficials that the reataurant la In no way connected to the Met or the Lacuna Beach temple. But the road to publlcaUon ot "Charley Potata's" -scheduled for releue ln two weeks -wun 't without it.a own 1et ot bl.aarre and humorouaoc~nces. When the couple besan the the project they blred a court re- porter to tr,.nscrtbe ta~s of alrll~ atoryl4tlllnt aeaaloni with thelr ft1endsln avlaUon. "When we put It on paper It was all unlnteJllslble jibberisb, 11 &aid Mrs . Winso, a United Airllnes atewardeaa. "It was almost lml)Ofsibie to understand even for her (the transcriber)." . Part ot the tranacrlptlon'a problem evolved from the re1u1ar drawbacks of recorded convena· Uoo. "The voice on the tape would say 'Thia bis' and we were ask· ins ouraelva 'How bis ls that?'," Mrs. W1nio explalned, (eaturing around an imaaJ.natJ otaiect w1lb her banda. ''There was 10 much lost between the aelual convena· Masked Hid~ "· EL CAJON <AP> -Wearlni a mask that conceals hideous burn acara, 12.year·oid Keith Hulin la back ID cbool, 10 month.a after a near.fatal euollne explosion. SO me Lhln11 haven't chanced. Kelli\ l9 b•ck to rtdJ.Da bta • blcycle and pract.lclnf ltlcb oo b1s ak&ttbo~. ".KE1m·s PERSONALITY HASN'T cbanfed,.. uld bis snolber. Ma~~ Hulin. "He'a atlll a daredevil, Ju.t Uk• before.\• But otba' (4l~s ~ 1twWn1ly cUtferent. Keith aUa m lbe claaarooni ~earlne • •peelal nylon stretch ault that _...ta bis akln grafts trOm HHi'ng and a helmet•Uke .W.uk whJcb covers a soft plulic shield molded to the contou.n of hla face. · Before Keith joined bis slxth 1rade ciaas at Tierra del Sol Junior m,b School, the acbool staff and dodon toot car• to prepare tbe other chl.ldnn to prevent tauntJ.nc r.mar.U. KEITH. TREY EXPLAINED TO cluamates, bad been burned In a 1asollne explosion Feb. 18. Ke llad .,._ 1D hospit.ala for alx months undergoing altin 1ratta. They trted to get the Jtudeata to u.nden~ Kelth'a feella1s and to realbe bow lnaCllta and rld1cule could hurt blm. Wb•n Ke1t.b took off the mask for airbJI and ~ ~ disflawifta ~ars. the>-encoura1ed clusmates to uk queatloDs inatead of whl.sperlnc amoac themselves. ''Apparently it work.cl really beautlMJy. He'a been ""'1 well recetyed, .. said Dr. Saul Amerlin1, the school psycllolt>Pt. lion and the transcription., ' .. WE'VE BEEN PIUEND8 SINCE we were S or I rtm old, •f nys X.Vln Opheinr, who alts by Ke'lt.h 1n 1ebool. ,.When the acclcleDt J\aneDed 1 wu lhlnldng, 'I sure don't want to loae blm.' He'a ltlll one ot my best friends." .. And the tape bad all ldndl fll 'you know.' oa It," Wlnso eddtet ... The couple junked the tranacrlption idea and decided to bet in writing dtff erent "'°ries and plecln1 them toJetbtr. "We ha~ to make lt up and piece it together so It would seem real," Mrs. Wlngo explained. "When you lint W1"lte lt all down itcomesouteochoppy. - '1We ~it. ao often I wu sick of it." And there were 1pell1n1 prob- lems. ·~ur 1pel.U.n1 was ao bad there were U.met we .coulcln 't find word.I ID ~ dtctlanary, '' Mn. Wl!lso NC.ited lauplnsly. - Tlfe couple peral.sted and final· Jy produced a manuscript. Then, the lonf search for a publlaber be" an. ''We sent the manuscript to 12 publlaben," Kn. Win10 aald. "About hall of them W~fe saylnc to return the book next year. They satd they already had all their tiUes for lh1s year.•• "We were getting pretty dla. couraged," h~r husband re· called. "We finally found a publisher in Fallbrook who said the book was aeUable but too rls· que tor him. 11 Finally, lbe couple's novel was accepted by Exposition Preas of New York. They didn't realize the extent of their accomplish~ ment until they toured the press back eut. "We went back to New·York and loured the plant," Wlngo ex- plained. "They have a whole warehouse of manuscripts they've tu.med down.•• ' But the Wrngos' novel -pat· terned after the experiences of one ot captain Wlnto's fellow Air California pUOt.1-was accepted. While the couple has scheduled an autoeraphing session Dec. 17 at B . Dalton /Pickwick Booksellers in South Coast Plaza, neither ls predicting Instant suc- cess for their first writing eb· deavor. "I think everyone who writes a book hopes it will ~ome a beat· seller," Wingo ad milted. "Un· leas lt'1 a tremendou. beat 1eUer yoa don't make much money and mostly it's authora with a name who make it. ''But a11thor1 do have sometbin• that's almost Im· mortal," he continued. "How many people actually do 1et a book published." • On that Ftbru&.ry day, Keith tried tQ llsht a fire 1n an under· ground fort with guollae. It exploded. gelth ran outllth Md scaled a five.loot fence to rail lnto a puddle of water, dousing the nam8' ~YWJloping .hi• b6dy. He suffered third-de1ree burns over 85 percent of his body. Doctors gave him virtually no chance to Uve. "THEllE"S NO WAY J CAN describe what he looked like," Mrs. Hulin aald, "and I couldn't cry in front of blm ." Last AprlJ, Keith was transferred to the Shrine Burn Center in Galveston, Texas. He returned home Aus. 2a after montba of pain, baths to remove dead akin, more operatlom, m'Ol"e pain. He muat _return to, Galveston every three monthl fo~ checkups. And be fac.6 other operaUooa in wblch plutio •'A.f- geona will work to reconstruct bla burned body, aomethln& be ii real.sting because be doesn't want to be burt any more. ,, . Newspaper Recycl,e Project ·Paying Off' • N ewp0rt Beach's newspaper \recycling program brou1ht in , $t,%J,2.SO in November, making a total of $103, 'I05 ln revenue fince the program began ln Sep- tember, 1914. Figures releued by Jacob F. Mynderse, city general services director, show that 551000 trees would have been required to pro- duce pulp equivalent le> the newsprint recycled in the 39· mQnth Pf'OCJ'&Ql. He estimated fO to 4S percent of NewpQrt households participate in the program. Once·a·month collection dates are scheduled. Details are available by c'1linl 640·2188. Newspapers, which can be placed in grocery bags, should be placed at the curb or in alleys on collection day>. Revenue received from newspaper sales goes into the NeWport Center Hit by Blackout Bus~ses in Newport Center were wit.bout power tor aboUt 20 minutes Monday night alter a ca· ble rallure cauaed an nploalon in an underground 1>9weryaolt. Jim Kennedy, spokesman for the Southem California Ed.iaon Company, said 710 cuatomen in Fashion Island' and Newport Center were affected by the power outage. It wu caused by an explosion In the vault at Blue Wa~r and Crown drives at about llp.m . city's 1eneral fund. ! The program bas won recopi· • lion from the Oran1e Couoty : Board of SupervJ1ors as con- trl butlns to the county's Cleanup ; and Beauutlcation profl'am. '1 1 NB Explorers ·: j; ' Wm Parade · u Members of tbe New.Port ~ Beach Police Explorers Post re. cenUy ~ tbo honors ln the eoJor guard divisfon of the andual Roek-o-Rama parade in Mono Bay. Marching in the parade were Greg deMocskonyi, Tom Gazai, , Chris LUdwig and Andrew Ills· 1ln. The annual parade ii bel4 in the central coast to•n as part ot a festival center~ on t.be ?'OCk that stands as a landmark in Morro Bay. p.._ Page .Cl RITES ••• p.m . at St. Mark Presbytettu Church, ZlOO Mar Vl.sta Drive. A famUf. friend, the Rev. Geoqe Voge , wtlldellvertbeeulop~ • The family aug1eats memorial contrtbutlons In llatan'a name\o the Corona del Mar ff1ih SchoOt Boosters Club. WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS...:- THE.. RESULTS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. ... • .. .. Asshown-- 18 Karat Gold Cube , Ctuster Ring with · diamonds. 9y lander, twice winner of the Oscar '°' ~ry design -~ DeBeers Diamonds International Award Laguna/South Coast VOL 70, NO. 340, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA By STEVE MITCHELL Ot"'90ellfll't ......... More than 150 anery Aliso Elementary School parents con- fronted Principal Lyle Proctor Monday afternoon to ask him why he pulled a three·minute Nativity scene from the South Laguna school's Dec. 13 Christmas play. And belore the bour-lonc meet· ing in the school cafeteria was over. parents had sicned a peU- ({on ur1lni rewtatement ot the Bethlehem scene, and 1u11ealed they will seek le1al recourse to get the manger scene back ln the Yule play. "We were never told about this major (school district) policy change," said Vlcki Reean, an Aliso School mother. "We've had the Nativity scene for years. It's a hlatorlcal and cultural scene - not religious," she said. But Proctor said his' recom· mendatlon that the scene be pulled was)>ued on what he calls the reUglous connotation ot the segment. "It might seem a contradicUon to be able to sine 'Away in a Mincer'," but not to be able to have a Nativity scene," Proctor told the parents. "The state Education Code does say we may use that song.'' But, he saJd, the recommendit· (See NATIVITY, Pase AZ) School Bond Measure OK'd By ANNE COOPER Of .. o.llJ ~ ... Ii.ff A $49 million school construe-· tion bond measure and a $15 million state apportionment measure were approved Monday for the March 7 baJJot by Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict trustees. A proposed S27 million lease- purchase agreement will not be on the ballot, however, as trustees split 3-3 on whether to in· elude it. A community survey conducted by lbe school district showed 6S percent of the respon- dents favored including both the bond and the lease-purchase Bevan Murder measures on the ballot, in addi- tion to the state apportionment measure. Trustees approved the bond and state apportionment measures 6-0, with trustee George White of San Clemente absent. Trustees Robert Bachelor of Laguna Niguel, Jan Overton of Dana Point and William Thompson or Mission Viejo supported the inclusion on the ballot of the lease-purchase measure. Board President Ted Kopp of Capistrano Beach and trustees Sarah Lipp and Edward Westberg of San Clemente op- Death Penalty Bid Backed by Jury By TOM BARLEY Of ... DMly P'li.t ltaff A defense challence to an Orange County Grand JUI')' in· I I dictment that seeks the death penalty for the alleged killer of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley was struck down today in Superior Court. Judge Hobert P. Kneeland ruled that the death penalty wUI stand in the case against Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, of Huntington Beach, who pleaded not guilty to all charges today. Fiori, who is being held in the county jail with bail denied, is Govinda's Will Fight For Its Name By. JOANNE REYNOLDS Otttit o.11r f'HM IUff Clalmlni God's name ls not 1ubject to trademark Jaws, a apokesman for Govinda 's Restaurant in Laguna Beach Monday said the business will fight a federal suit pending 1gainsl it. The suit wu filed last week by the International Soclety for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) which claims to hold a aervlcemark to the name Gorln· da. The sult alleges that the restaurant at 1750 S. Coast Jlighway misapproprlated the name. The legal action was seen u an jtllempt by the JSKCON hierarchy to disassociate the sect from the four individuals named In the muJUple criminal indict· ,anents stemmin1 from the 111urder at Stephen John BoVln. Bovan, 88, of Fountain Valley died Oct. 22 when be wu shot. <See SlIJT, P8'e Al> "Man~ \Oorduannot Quench iou.r • 1'0' can floodl droion U." LONDON (AP) -l"orm•r :American .,.auty quMn Joye. dttnn-r waa ordered by 1 m11l1trai.• eoun today to ltarid tiUl oa cbu1• o( abductliic • 1oun1 Mormon 1nl11lonar, for whom 1be • b11 an ••an- contumlnt .,..Ion." M In MtKlnney, 2T, o( .Albe•U&t. J(.C., appeared In ~ tourt In Epeom, aoutbwtst of .J.Andon, weann1 • -plM 4rtla identified by the prosecution as the man who pumped nine bullets into Bovan last Oct. 22 durinJ a confrontctioo outside a Newport Beach restaurant. Judge Kneeland ordered him to go on trial Jan. 23 with three arrested co-defendants: Alex- ander Kulik, 28, or Newport Beach, Anthony Marone Jr., 23, and Raymond Resco, 28, both or Huntington Beach. A fifth defendant, Joseph Davis, 28, was reported to be in Tokyo, Japan, today, awaiting a jet flight that will land him in Los Angeles tonight. Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter 1aid he hopes lo have Davis in the Orange County Jail before midnight. Davis was arrested in In- donesia last week. Three other persons named in the Grand Jury indictment are still being hunted in what are described as "over· seas .. areu. All eight face cbarees of murder, conspiracy, extortion and robbery. Davis ls identified as a former member or the Hare Krishna movement, a sect that has · ficured prominently in police in· vestigation or w}lat officers say is an international drug distribut- ing ring centered in Orange County. Davis, three fugitives and Kulik are identified by the proe- eou tion as principals in the operation of Prasadam Dia· tributors, Inc., a company al· leaedly linked to the Hare Krishna movement. Pretrtal action aaainst the four arratcoed defendants h41 been scheduled for Dee. 16 and 19 and Jan. 16. Kulik, Marone and Resco are free on bail. Flori's lawyer told Judie Kneeland today that he will seek his client'• freedom on baU dur- inl the Dec. Uhearlnc. De(ense lawyen 1ald they ln- (8ee DEATH, Pace AZ> posed putting the lease-purchase measure on the March 7 ballot. If both the bond and the lease- purchase measures had gone on the ballot and won, the bond measure would have taken pre- cedence, said Superintendent Jerome Thornsley. The bond is· sue requires two thirds voter ap- proval to pass. The lease-purchase agr~ement would have required only a sim· pie ma1ority support. School district officials have estimated Capistrano Unified's student enrollment, currenUy at 16,000, will increaese by 8,000 new students in the next five years. District schools are cur- rently at or beyond capacity, they said. · Two previous bond elections have won simple majority sup- port, but not the two thirds re- quired to pass. The current $49 million bond measure, if approved, would meet district building needs for the nut five years, Thornsley said. He emphasized that bonds, if approved in March, could be sold only as the district's student enrollment increues. If atudents don't move in as expected, the district would not qualify to sell bonds, he said. Passing the bond measure will not increase the current 90-cent tax rate, said Thornsley. Instead, it will extend the period of obliga- tion, so the bonds wm not be paid off so soon. "Passing this bond measure will mean that students using the schools now will pay for them," said Westberg. The scope of school building proposed by district ad- ministrators, If the bond measure ls approved by voters, includes: -Capistrano Valley High School additions to double <SeeBOND, Page A%) Injured SC Woman, 92, Calls for Aid A 92-year-old San Clemente woman, who fell in her home Monday and broke her leg, was able to inch across the noor to a telephone to call firemen for help. Ina Bird, of 126 Ave. Santiaao, · waited inside while firemen broke into her locked home to ad· mtnlster first aid. Mrs. Bird was transported by city ambulance to $an Clemente General Hospital, where a n\ll'Binll suoervlsor said ahe will undergo' surgery today. Three other San Clemente 1enlon have been less fortunate thia year, lying helpless and in paln and u lon1 aa four days after f alll, before help arrived. "Mn. Bird ia a very plucky lady," aald Capt. Pbilllp Van Kam of the fire department. a•alnet hll will In a remote CO\&D· try coti,ae, po1ae11~1 a fake re· volvtr and a bottle of chloroform. Anderaon baa cbatfic(that the kfdriapped h1m for sexual J>Ul'POHI· Ml11 11eKlnise)''1 attor~:!l Stuart Elttod. aou1ht dlam of the c.,. on iround• that her motive wa ''nellber hit. nor aatet but a dMJ>'Hllecl and 11.a· ff re love" tor Ancktrt0n . Ml11 MeKlftney wfpt at be added: .. Many word• c..anOt quench lo¥9 nor cu ftoodll drowa it." H• added Lbat altbOup tbOls I Dlllr ........... ALISO ELEMENTARY SCHOOL PRINCIPAL LYLE PROCTOR FIELDS QUESTIONS P•r•nt• w.... Prote1tf ng End to Nativity Scene In Chrt1tm•• Pl•Y '.Jeseph' a Stagehand Students Unaware Of_ Controversy Aliso school kids ran across the stage ln the school cafeteria Monday afternoon, most of them oblivious to the controversy their Christmas production bas sparked.~ l>rama teacher Barbara Mudge told the squirming children to .. pipe down,'' then or· dered a group of elves to line up for their stage entrance. "Okay, Santa goes offstage and you begin 'I'm Dreaming of a White Christmas,' " Mrs. Mudge shouted over the laughter of the stage kids. "Then the spotlight comes down on you Sucar Plum Fairies," she said. "You droop- ing dolls stay limp until the song is over," Mrs. Mudge continued, indlcatfl,g three alrla bent at the waiat on the stage. "Remember. you 're supposed to be broken." "Come on elves," the monologue continued. "Come :running right on the staee. That's :rljht.'' · Turning to the reporter, Mrs. Mudge said, "We've had a Nativity sceoe every year atnce l.MS.'~ "It's a three minute segment in a 45 minute production, and it's strictly a historical portrayal ot the birth of a human beln1 named Jesus," she said, shaking her head. "I just don't see what the up. roar ls about." Turning back to the stage, Mrs. Mudge watches as "Mra. Claus" sing-songs, "Ob, my goodness, looJc what the elves have done. What wonderful elves." But Mrs. Mudge .lsn 't llstenlnf. "See that boy over there," she said, poinU,ng to a young student beslde the curtain. "He was go- int to t)e Joseph. "Now he's just a stage hand." High Court Denies Pi-egnancy Sick Pay WASHINGTON (AP) - Employers may deny preenant workers sick pay but cannot deny them seniority benefits during their precnancy leave, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. Jn its second mlrjor declllon on pregnancy 1n a year, the court re· lied beavUy on its prlor rulinC that denied women workers the right to have pregnancy benefits included in an employer's health insurance proeram. But lbe JusUcea drew a distinc- tion 'ove'r seniority beoeflts, cit· inc a difference in "benefits" and .. burdena.'' • •1aere, by comp1riao.n, tbe Nuhvllle Gu Company bu not merely refused to extend to ·women a benefit that m o c&Mot and do not recelve but bu 1m· poled on women a 1ubltantial burden that men need not nr~ fer," JusUce William H. Behn· qulst 1ald for the court. Student In Canyon Crash Dies Steven Dave Swearinlen, son of SaddJeback College head foot.- ball coach Ken Swearingen, di~ Monday afternoon a.s a result of injuriea be received in a stnale· . car cruh on La&una Canyon • Road Sunday evenln.I. • The 19-year*old Saddleback Collete student body Yice presi· dent WU PfODOl.LDCed dead at Saddletiiik Community &~pita.I Monday, less tban 24 boUns after his amall sports car careened ()If the roadway a m.lle and a quarier eut of El Toro Road. Pollce 111d Swearingen, of 888 Summlt Way, Laguna Beaeb. p.asaed several slower movinc cars goinl out the canyon road at about 6:45 p.m. Sunday, and a~ parently lost control ot the small sports car when he returned to his own lane. A passenger, Steven Desmon4 Williams, 19, of 34592 Calle Paloiqa, Caplatrano Beac~ l'e'" celved minor injuries wben tbe car slammed into an embank· ment and flipped several times. Sweart.npn waa trapped UD• derneatb the engine and police and firemen bad to lift t.be wreckage to extract the 1outh. The ronner Los Alamitos HiCh S<?hool atudent moved to Luuna Beach with bis family a little more th&D a year qo. His 'llster, Karen, ls a aenlor at .Lallma Beach HlOSc.bool. Salidleback Collete officlall said that tbe YOW\I man bad planned to pla, for his father next year. He wu a business m.i« at the college, pl1yed soccer, and Wiii elected student body vice pr911. dent earlier thia year. William Kelly, asaociate cleail I or student affairs knew Swear~ incen au his Ute. "I've known bill) for 1B ,_.,.. (See DEAD, Pa•e A.%) Coast Weather Falr throuab Widnes· day. Lows tonl&ht fn mld·50I. msbs Wednesday 7510 83. , _, Samlleback Envisions lnP,ation By LAURIE KA~Pt!R Ol•o.i••"--Seddleba ck Comm unity CoHece District's future build.Inc need•. estimated to cost $7 million 1n today's dollars, could actually cost as much or more lhan $122 mlJUoninlOyeara. "We all talk about inftation. Welt, here is lnflatlon," aald Superintendent Robert Lombardi NATIVITY. • tioqotbat the manger scene be cul was based on what he called stipulations under the U.S. Constitution, the CalJfornia Conslilutioo and the state's Education Code. "Officials in the Newport- Mesa, Tustin and Norwalk school distrtct.s all said in their interpretation of the code that there will be no religious scenes or symbols and this is the tack I've taken this year." District Supt. Dr. Robert Sanchis backed Proctor's de- cision today. ''The County Counsel indicates the· Nativity scene ls or such significance to the Christian re- ligion that it ls hard lo conceive . of any circumstance where it ls of a secular nature," he aald. "It has profound religious symbolic meaings." "Our interpretation is, the school cannot organize and direct any program that ls re- ligious in nature." But parents had their own in- terpretations of the U.S. Constitution. with drama teacher , Barbara Mudge standing to ad- dress the cafeteria crowd, "Congress shall make no law prohibiting the free expression of rehgwn." she began One mother said, "My m1:11or concern is that <1nyl1mc there Is pressure on you, you say. 'Don 't make waves. we'll change,' r lhink someone is leaning on you. 1£ it is the Supreme Court decisions I want to know as a laxpayer. re it's the board or education, we want to know that, loo." Proctor shook his head and said. "I have given you my in- terpretation and my recommen- dation." Eloise Dickerson, whose son plays Santa Claus in the school play, disagreed with Proctor's interpretation, saying, "Our years are baaed on the birth of this child, and whether it was a divine birth or normal. al hap- pened." Parent Richard Spraker told Proctor. "We are only tryint to complement an existing pro- gram as history and culture. It your decision stands, then I would hke to have before Dec. 8 a letter as to why you have eliminated the scene to hand over to an attorney.'' Parents also questioned Newport Beach attorney Michael F'. Obrand, who admitted he told Proctor last Tuesday that he was opposed to musical selections in the school production. "H the majority wants the scene,'' one parent asked the bearded attorney, "Then why should you get your way?" Obrand said he discussed the play with the school principal, ·'and I told him I have a daughter at the school and that is my con- cern. I'm concerned about viola- llons of the First Amendment and the 1eparation of church and state." In an interview following the meeling, Obrand said Proctor in- formed him last Tuesday the de- cision to pull the scene had already been made -before Obrand came to see him. "All these people think r did 1t," he aaid, pointing to a line of petition signers inside the· cafeteri•. "1 wish I did, but 1 didn't.'' District Supt. Sanchis ad- mitted he received calls from o\her individuals, adding that he did nt'Jt. wish to idenWy them. "This is not a majority or rtUnority rule issue," Sanchis said. "It's aconslitutional one." ORANOl COAST LISG DAILY PILOT in discusaine the distrlct'1 future buildin& needs wilh truat.eet Mon- day. He said inflation alone will cause construction coat.a to more than double in 10 years. Co.o.aLruc· Uon costing $7.5 million today will coslS18.3mUllooln~.Dr.U>m· bardisaid. lf the district's building needs BOND ••• capacity from 1,200 to 2,400 stu· dents at the MLssion Viejo school. -San Clemente Hich School additions to increase caplcity by 600 students, to a totaJ ot 2,400 students. -Forty portable classrooms to be installed at district biSh schools. -Thirty portable classrooms r or district elementary schools. -Purcbpse or a fourth hiSh school site, this one in Misaion Viejo. -Construction oC a fourth junior high school, to be located · in Mission Viejo. -Cbnatruction ot three new elementary schools. -Construction of a Dana Hills High School stadium. F,....PageAI BENEFITS. • not awarding sick-leave pay to pregnant employees ls legally in- distinguishable from the disabili- ty insurance program upheld" in lheGEca.se. ln the GE case. the justices voled 6-3 that pregnancy dis- cram ination is not necessarily il- legal discrimination based on sex. That decision, like today's, was based on the court's interprelc.- lion of the CiviJ Rights Acl of 1964 and other federal laws concern- iog job discrimination. Frora Page Al DEAD ••. like he was a family member. It was certainly a great deal more than the Joss of a student body vice president." · Kelly and Ken Swearingen were in the service together. Clues Scarce VISTA (APJ -Police say they have no new leads in the rape of a 16·year·old girl and the shooting of her Cather by two men who broke into the family home. were spread evenly over lbe next ten years. with project.a valued at $'7.5 million in today's dollars built each year, the price would steadily rise. Inflation alone would cost the district about ~7 million with tho ten year tot&l at '122 mllllon, the superintendent said. Even with this lnnauon, Lom.' bardi said, the dlatrict should be able to complete it.a projected con- strucUon if the district's tax rate remalna uncban1ed. Re said the district could finish it. bulldina pfOlr•m wlt.hln the next decade if it conUnuea t.o spend 37 cent.a of ita SS-cent tax rate on consLrucUon. At Utla rate, and con.s1dertng declinine increues in the as-· sessed valuation, the district could raise almost~ miJlion tor construction alone by 1987, he said. Lombardi said increased operating expenses or the district, which is e:ipect.ed to grow in enTollment, shbuld be met wtlh the steady tax rate and increases in assessed valuation and at.ate apportionment. . AdditJc>naUy, he said, construe- .lion may cost the diltrict less if the state's share ot construction coats increues. Last year, the state's share of the dlatrlct's building coats was about nine percent, said Dr. Edward Hart, assistant superin- tendent for general development. Butbla year, becauaeofincreased enrollment.s, the state's sbare bas been raised to23 percent, be said. Under the state'• ''crazy !ormula,"Lombardisald, thec:Us- trict may receive from 40 to 50 percent of its construction costs from the state in the future. The superintendent said he did not consider tbe state funding in his inflation projections because "l 'm presenting the worst." Larry Taylor, board pre!Hdeot, asked if it wouldn't be better for the district to pass a bond election and speed up the building pro- gram to avoid some of the infla- lionaryc08t.s. NoUng that bonds require in· lerest, trustee Norrisa Brandt said, "You probably still have to pay_ in the final analysis.'' Lombardi added that ac- celerating the building pro- gram would not accelerate the slate aide program. Hart told trustees that, accord- ing to state formulas, the college district currently is about 10 per- cent "underbuilt." After the dis- trict builds the first phase of the new northern campus and a $5.5 million classroom building on the main campus, he said, it probably still will be under bu ill. · The adminstrator said this is because Sadd.Jeback enrollment is Increasing while other districts in the state are losing students. F,.._PageAJ PASSION TOLD ••. whether he could support her. she quoted him as responding: "Honey, I would work five Jobs to support you.•' ''To a woman this means something," the petite defendant said softly. ''These are pretty heavy promises." She said the most important commitment she made to An- derson was to give him her virtue. Recalling Anderson's earlier testimony at the hearing, Miss McKinney said: "Kirk tries to say I tempted him. He told Epsom pol ice I was wearing a skin tight leopard's akin jump. sult. I bad black Jeans with a puffy-sleeved lop, which has about as much sex appeal as a potato sack. "Any physical desire I felt was an indirect result of the great spiritual and mental love I had tor him, a Jove he encouraged," she added. "I cannot say I ever got any pleasure out ot sexual relations wlth Kirk. I was too busy trying to satlafy him." May's attorney Robert AD· drewa said hls client did not believe Anderson's detention was • kidnap, bat rat.her "a rescue from an_ oppressive and tyran- or•anlzaUon" -the Mormon church -and that It was neeesaary for Andenon '• good -andhilute. o.11, ........... ...... Dana Biiis' lazzg Plag ' ''Toothpick Charlie'' sprawls on the ground in scene from Dana Hills High School production of "Some Like It Hot." a spoor m which two Jazz players on the lam join an all· girl band. "Charlie" is played by Bob Smith. Other players, left to right, are Andre Mills, Joe Hullinger, Wendy Chausse, Steve Stanczyk and Michele Parsons. The play wiU be at 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday in the scbool 's Porthole Theater. Ticket information is available by calling J96 -6666. From Page Al SUIT •.. nine times while leaving another restaurant in Newport Beach. Four of the eight people indict- ed in that case were at one lime associated with or members of the Laguna Beach Hare Krishna Temple. The four, Alexander Kulik, Roy Christopher Richard, Joseph Fedorowski and Joseph Davis Ill, were partners in a Newport Beach Investment firm, Prasadam Distributing Interna- tiona I. Inc. CPD[). PDI is also named as a plaint1H in the ISKCON suit. Davis, the owner or Govinda's, is currently beine brought to Orange CoWlty from Jakarta, In- donesia. Monday, Peter Reinholdt, whose Hindu name is Pad- nagerbha Das. called the Daily Pilot to say the reslaurant would fight the suit. Reinholdt, who described himself as the manager and legal representative or the restaurant, claimed the suit is in contradic- tion to the sect's teachings. lie said he isn't a member of the Laeuna Beach temple, but said he is "a member of the Hare Krishna movement.·' He said the word Govinda is "accepted universally as on~ of God's authoritcd names. Group Meets The Laguna Beach Cultural Committee WilJ meet Monday at 8 p.m . to discuss cultural peeds of the community. The meetin1 will be held at the Lila Zall Ballet Center. 1863 South Coast 'Highway. Bird Lecture Set Tonight In Clemente Bird habitats and their pres- ervation will be explained by Saddleback College biology teacher Tom Leslie during a meeting ot the South Coast Audubon Society toni«bt. The meeting will t>egln at 7:30 p.m . in the Laguna Federal Sav- ings building, San Clemente. The public is invited to attend the meeting and also join tbe group's field trip oo Saturday. Ranger Pat Muldowney, parks and recreation naturalist for the Pendleton Coast, will sulde society members ~nd guests around The Trestles area near San Onofre Beach. Participants are asked to meet at 7:30 a .m. Saturday at 801 N. EJ Camino Real, San Clemente. Participants are advised to bring lunch. . Fro..PageAl DEATH ••. tend to seek separate trials for their clients, an as yet un- scheduled motion that will be op- posed by prosecutor Carter. If the motions are granted by Judge Kneeland, it could mean u many as rourseparate trialsln January and a total or eight separate trials if and wben all the de(endants are in custody. Student A ebat'le ol unethlcal tesUna procedures was levied a1atnst the Capistrano Unltled School Dlatrlct Monday by a Dana Hills Hlch School senior, who said stu· denta are beb•i "'PJ'epped" fbr standardized 1tat.e teats. ''These standardhed teats have been used to compare stu- dent achievement school by school and dl1trlct by diatrlct," Greg Dempster of San Juao Caplstrano told Capistrano Unified trwstees. "The teats are designed to measure rea<Ung, writing and math skills de· veloped throughout a school career. ''Preparation is supposedly not effective -in which case it's a waste of time," he said. "In any case, there is a question whether it is ethkal to pull kids out ot class for two days' tutoring for the tests." Dana Hills principal James Kremblas denied today that seniors at the •chool are belng "prepped" !or the tests, which he said ls the "Survey of Basic Skills," a California assessment program. "If you've had a driver's license for live years and you need to renew it, you pick up a booklet to review before you take the test," said Kremblas. "You have been driving for five years, and you know to &o on the green and slop on the red, but you re- view anyway. "It's the same with the stan- dardized teats," h(! said. ''This is a test of skills students have picked up all along the way - certainly by ninth or 10th grade. Two years later, as senio~. they · are tes~ in skills they know, but perhapsn• to brush up. That's all we 're doing in orrertng them a refresher on spelling, sentence usage, that kind of thing." Kremblaa said other districts offer whole courses to prepare seniors for the tests. Capistrano Unified is very "low key" by comparison, he said. Seniors are excused from two class periods of ''American Gov- ernment" to review before the test, the principal said. Seoiors not taking t he government course are asked to take the 100-mlnute review during a Cree period. ''I met with Greg this momJng, and be said he didn 'l reaJb;e cer- tain things," said KrembJas ... He .- agreed that 'prep' wasn't the right word to use.•' LB Police ,, ' Auction Set ,, Laguna Beach police will be auctioning off more than 150- ilems, ranging from bicycles to radios Saturday mornine next door to the fire station on Forest -Avenue. The public auction begins at 10 a.m., with items including aurf· · boards, fire extinguishers, ten-• nis rackets and jewelry going to ., the highest bidder. • For more infonnatfon, call Lt • .11 John Zelko at the police depart-" ment, 494-1124 . 4 I Board Meeting Set, The Laguna Beach Parks and' Recreation committee has scheduled a 7:30 p.m. meetinfC Dec. 15 in the Human Affairs of. lice, 505 Forest Ave. ,-~~-:.--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~ WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS- THE, RESULTS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. I Asshown- 18 Karat Gold Cube Cluster Rlng with diamon.ds. By Lander, twice winner of the Oscar for jewelry design -the Oe8eers Diamonds International Award I 4 ' l· 17 I ' _VOL. 70, NO. 3,0, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CEN~> ~ . . .......... b Co111~t .,µ~mes Pre~ancy S~ck Pay · WASHINGTON (AP) - Employers roay deny pr.ant workers sick pay but cannot deny them seniority benoflta during their pregnancy leave, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. In its second major decision on pregnancy ID a year, the court re· lied heavily on its prior ruling that denied women workers the right to have pregnancy benefits included ln an employer's health inaurance procram. , But the~ drew a cUatlne· Uon ovtr 1eJl)qrtty beoellu, cit· ine a dltterence ht "beneftta" and "burdens.'• "H\IC'e, by comparison, the N a•hirtUe Gas Company bu not merely refused to extend to women a benefit that men cannot and do not receive but has im· posed on women a aubatantial burden that men need not suf· fer," Juallce WlUiarn H. Rehn· qulat aaid fort.be court. The court sent back to Jowe:r f echral courts two pre1nancy benefit cases used to reach today's decision, one from Ten· neuee and the other from Calllornia. Wblle the action won unan· imous approval by. tbe nlne justices, four of them volced con· cern over the court's findlnl that School Bond Measure OK'd By ANNE COOPER Of .. o.11, l'llM SU.ff A $49 million school construc- tion bond measure and a $15 million state apportionment measure were approved Monday for the March 7 ballot by Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict trustees. A proposed $27 miJllon lease- purchase agreement will not be on the ballot, however, as trustees split 3·3 on whether to ln· elude it. A community survey conducted by the school district showed 65 percent or the respon· dents favored including both the bond and the lease·purchase measures on the ballot, ln addl· tion to the state apportionment measure. Trustees approved the bond and state apportionment measures 6·0, with trustee George White of San Clemente absent. Trustees Robert Bachelor o( Laguna Niguel, Jan Overton of Dana Point and William Thompson of Mission Viejo supported'the inclusion on the ballot of tbe leaae-purcbaae measure. Board President Ted Kopp of Capistrano Beach and trustees Si.rah Lipp and Edward Westberg of San Clemente op- posed putting the leue-purcbase measure on the March 1 ballQt. U both the bond and tho lease· purchase measures bad aone on the ballot and won, the bond measure would have takt:n pre· cedence, said Superintendent Jerome Thornsley. The bond Ls· (See BOND, Page AZ) 1College Costs ·Eyed Saddle back Envisions Inflation · By lAtJRIE KASPER °' .. .,..., ........... Saddleback Com.munlty College District'• future bullciins needs, estimated to cost '1 million Jn today'• dollars, could actually cost as much or more than $122 million in lOyears. ' "We all talk about lnllaUon. Well, here is inflation." said Superintendent Robert Lombardi in dllcuaaing tbt district's future bullcllaa need.a with tnul&ea Mon· day, He said inflation alone will cause comtructJon coeu to more than double ID 10 yean. Construe· lion costing $7.5 million today wilt cott $18.3millionin1981, Dr. Lom- bardi said. JC the district's building needs I· !Angry Parents Ask ! Return of Nativity By STEVE MITCHELL a•o.Hr,........., More than 50 angry Aliso Elementary School parents con· fronted Principal Lyle Proctor Monday afternoon to ask him why he pulled a three·minute Nativity scene from the South La,una acbool'a Dec. 13 Cbrietmas play. lion that the manger scene be cut was baaed on what he called stipulations under the U.S. Con1Ulution, the California Constllutlon and the state's Education Code. "Otficlals in the Newport· Mesa, Tustin and Norwalk school districts all said ln their lot.erpretation of the code that there will be no nll1lous scenes or 1ymbols and th1I la the tack <SeeNATIVITY, Pa1eAZ> were spread eveolf over the next leD ,)'..,... witb JnJtcta ~alued at $7.5 million ID today'1 dollan buUt neb 7ear, the price would steadily rise. Inflation alone would COit the diltrict about $C7 million with the ten year total at $122 mllllon, tbe superintendent. said. Even with th.la inflation, Lom· bardl said, the district should be able to complete its projected COD· st.ruction lf the district's tax rate remains unclwlled. He said the dlatrict could finish it.a buildlni program wlthin the next decade U it continues to spend 37 cents of Us 95-cent tu rate on construction. At thla rate, and comldertnt declining lncreues ln tbe as· seaaed valuation, the district could raise almost '152 million for constructloo alooe by 1987, be said. Lombardi said increased operaUnaiexpenses of tbe diltrict, which la expect.eel to 1row in enrollment, should be met with the steady tax rate and increases in aneaaed valuation and state appprUomnent. AddlUooally, he said, construe· .tion may coet the dhttrlct less if <See Fl1TURE, Pap AZ) the woman iD tbe Tenneu~ case failed to prove an ioltJal cue ot dlscrlmlnatton acalnat her employer'1 alck·lea\te policy. The Woa\Cn ln tbe two cases M- elded tOday won vlctorJea in lower courts. Those victories were upheld u rar a1 aeniority beneflta are concerned but now appear ln jeopardy over their sJck·leave claim.a. Nora Satt7 worked ff?r the Nashville Gu Company tOl' more than three years when 1be ~ame preanut ln 191Z. Shedld not receive sick-leave beoetlta during ber materolty leave becauae company policy ex· eluded pregnafiey 81 an "illness~' covered by the plan. When Mn. Salt)' wa1 able to return to work, she learned tbat her Job had been aboll1hed and that 1he had loat seniority rl&hta Tiro Viejo Residents Pen Airline Novel By WILLIAM HODGE °''1180.ltr ........... It started out the way so muy great Jdeu do -over drinb and boisterous ltorytellinf. But Mlaaion VleJo resldenta Robert and Nancy Widgo were c9nvinced lbe stories they beard contained the stuff of freat llter•ture. Or, at the lQut, enter· taining reading. So the two airline employees decided to write a book. "When we~ lbta project we expected to put lt out ln two wee kl," Wingo, an Air California captain, recalled of the couple's deci1ion to write a novel abOut an airline pilot. ''It took ua t•o years before we finally 1ot lt .into draft form:• Nancy Wln10 confeesed, ''We didn't know what we were faclng so we took tt atep by step. "We just kept stamblln1 atone until we got where we are now." But tbe road to fW>Ucatioo ot "Charley Pot.ala's' -1cbeduled for t'eleaseln twoweekl -wun't without iu own aet of bizarre Ud bumorow1occurrences. When the couple be•an the the projee~ they hired a court r-. porter to transcribe tapes of airline storytellinC sessions with their frtendl lD aviation. "When we put It Ob paper St waa all unlntelllglble jlbb4Jrllh, 0 said Mrs. Wingo, a United Airlines stewardess. ..It WU almost lmpoalble to undentand even forber (thetra11Scrlbet') ... Part of the tranttt'lptloa'a 'problem evolved from the r~ drawbacks of recorded CODY...,. Uon. And before the hour.Jong meet· lne in the school caJeteria was over, parents bad 1l1ned a peti· lion urging rein.statement of the Bethlehem scerie, and suggested lbey will seek legal recourse to 1et the man1er scene back lo the Yule play. "We were never told about this major (school dlatrlct> policy chan1e," said Vicld Re1an, an Aliso School mother. "We've bad the Nativity scene for years. It's a historical and cultural scene - not reUll0\.11," ahe aafcf. Trucker Saves Boy, 3 •'The voice cm the tape would ~1 "Tbll bla' and we were Uk· lnl ounelves •How big il'thatT','' Mrs. Wlnlo explained, aesturfnl around an Imaginary object. With her bands. •"lbere was so iiiucb Iott between the actual COD9C'S&• tion and the tranacription., But Proctor said bta recom- mendation that the ecene be (>Ulled was bued on wbat be calls tbe reUgloua connotation or the '411ment. .. It mi,bheem a contradlctlon o be able to 11n1 'Away ln a 4an1er'," but aot to be able to lave a Natlvlty scene," Proctor old tbe parenta. "The 1tate Educ a Um Code does ••1 we ma.T JH that fCllll," But, he lald, the recomm~· Auto Plunges <her E-nt Into· Creek SALEM, Ul. (AP) -Emerson Smalley shrugs off the praise rrom frleads, aaylns aQ7one .would have done the 1a111e. But police ear that Ult weren't ror him, a S.7ear-old bo)' would be dead • Smalley, 45, a driver for a local proJ)ue 1aa company1 wa1 croU.- lnJ Brubaker Creek aaon1 U.S. 50 at dutk ,Monday When be llW m h1I re.,.~ that a car careened tlfei an embankment ancllntotbe water. .,The Hr bad floated under the brtdce and to one •Ide," aald Smalley. ff• ran to the creek bank and wu met by Brenda Stanford, 20, clutohlq ber aoo, Travll, 1, and 1creamtna that herotber boy wu 1tlll ln the eubmerged car. ,_ "I toot off my coveralaa and bootl," said Smalley. . He waded into tbe water that was five toa!x feet deep. "There wasn't much of the car ahowi.IJI, .. be ,.ld. At\er several \U\IUcceaaful at- temeta to Joeate the boy, Smalley 1umllloood b1a son. Ed, 2.•, wbo had hurried over from bla trandfatber't home nearby, drawn by the headl11bta and commotloa. ''J'd been In tbere <the car) a c(J\U)le Umea bef()N," aald the elder~. ·~ wa1101M clotblq 0oat•n1 arwDd lD then, and every time 1 sot abOld Of IOC~ I tbOUbt lt WU the US.O BE&O, 'Pa1e .U') .. And the tape bad all ktndi Ot 'you knows' on lt." Wln19 actded; The couple Junked the trantcrlptlon Idea and decided to beitn wrltlnf clltterent at.odes and piecing them tocelber. "We had to make It up 8Dd piece lt tocethereo It '#0\lld Mein (See NOV~P .. eA%) ' . to bid fM another Job wttbln tbe" companr: ,. Sonja LYnn Bere waa a teach~. ln Rlcbll>Qnd, Calli., and lbe lol~ •• support or her f amlly tifin •bt became pregnant. Shp c:hallenaed the school bOaid'! authority to tell ber at wbat •talt. in her pretJJ.tncy she woUld nq longer be able to wort ind l5b8 also aued to cellect sick pay. (See BENEFITS, Pa•e A.I) Death By TOii BULEY ... .., .......... A def enae eballen•• to an Orance County Grand JUI')' in· dictment ~t aeeb the •&th penalty for the alle1ea klller ol Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley wu 1truck down today In Superior Court. Judae Robert P. Kneeland ruled that tbe death penalty ,.ut stand ln the. cue aratns\ lerrv Peter Flori, U. of HunllDl'On Beach, wlio Jjlelded not 1\1.llty to allcbarces~. Fiori, who la being held ln the county JaU with bail denied, ls ldeDtlfled by the prosee~oa u the man wbo P\lQlped aloe bulleta into Bovan 1aat Oct. 22 durin& a conf rontcttoo outside a Newport Beach restaurant. \ ~udee Kneeland ordered h1m :• to co on trial Jan. 23 with three arrested co-defendants: Ales· ander Kulik, 28, of Newport Beach. AnabonJ Manme ~ za. aQCl &Q'llCmd -~.. "' H~Bueb.; /. flftb def endaat. loseph • Davlt, 21, wu ~ to bo Jn ... Tot~~ &odaJ. awal&IN.a ·Jet t.1aat WUJ lU*l llhD'm r.. ADae es t.ontiht.. Depqty Diltrict At:tonM7 DaYe- Carter Aid he hopes to bave Davia ID tbe Orange Coun~ Jail before mldnlabt. Davll was arrested ln ID· donesla tut ~ Three other per.om oam«l la th4 Grand J~ lnd1ctment ere atil1 being bUnted in what are ~ribcld a ''Offl'• ae.u"anu. All elabt face eharcea ot murder, coo.spiraer, extortioll and rol>berY. Dnla la Wentifled as •J;: member 'of the Hare movement, a sect that bu ficured ptV1Jlinently ID po1b ID· veatlptlaa at wbat officers A)' la an l.ntematSaul 4nqs dlatrlbQt;. inc rlnc centered 1D Oranie Count)'. • Davia, three fugitive• 1D4 Kulik are ld,entlfied. by the Pl'Cll· ecutlon •• prladpala 111 tb~ operatJon of Praadam DI•· trtbuton, Inc., a company al· leeed11 llnted to the Bare KrishDa move.meat. Pretrial actloo agalmt lM fi arrataned d6tendanta baa beei, acbedJled tor Dec. 16 _, 18 and Jan. I&. Kullk, Marone and RelCO arefreeoat>aU. Flori'• lawyer told JQdco. Kneeland todQ that be will ieek bta clleat"• freedom on ball chat· Ing ta. Dec. u bearinJ • -DeftGM lawyeta said the1 ...,, tend to _. HP8f•te trtall r~ 'their cUent_~L~D .. 1et UD• 1cbeduled IDCllJOIJ that will be op.. pated bf DnleCtdoC Carter. CIMD~ Pace A!> ,. ~La~a ()rash.· -_.... . . €mwded .Graves ~ I ~:~:Victim Dies Charged NEWAR~ N.J. CAP) -A funeritl director waa accused by tbe stale or New Jersey today of crowdlni the r•mains of 1,S:U 1h· fantl and stUlborl1 l)ablel lnto mall gravelf over ' ·~·1ear period while under conitact to Newark's Department of Wetrare. ,, Steven Dave Swearlnaen, son of -Saddleback Colleae head root. beU coach Ken Swearingen, died llkklday afternoon as a result. of injuries he received tn a slntle· Clll' crash on Laguna Canyon ~oad Sunday evening. The 19-year-old Saddleback aUege student body vice presl· rit was pronounced dead at Slddleback Community Hospital e.fopday, less than 24 houn after hJl tmall aporta car careened off ~roadway a mile and a quarter el)t of El Toro Road. l>ollce said Swearlneen, or 888 F,....PageAJ BENEFITS. • Rehnquist, referring to the court's decision last Dec. 7 in a case involving the General Elec· tric Company, said the "policy or not awarding sick-leave pay to pregnant employees is legally in· dlstlngtilahable from the dlsablli· ty insurance program upheld" in the GE case. In the GE case, the justices voted 6-3 that pregnancy dis· crtmlnation Is not necessarily II· lesal discrimination based on sex. That decision, like locby's, was based on the court's interpret&· lion of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and other federal laws concern· 1ng job discrimination. Summit Way, Laguna Beach, pa11ed several slower moving cars 1oinl out the canyon road at about 8:'5 p.m. Sunday, and ap. parently lost control of the small sports car when he returned to his own lane. A passenger, Steven Desmond Wllliams, 19, of 34592 Calle Paloma. Capistrano Beach, re- ceind minor injuries when the. car slammed into an embank· ment and flipped several times. Swearingen was trapped un· detnealh the engine ana')>olice and firemen had" to lift the wreckage to extract the youth. The former Los Alamitos High School student moved to Laguna Beach with bis family a little more than a year ago. His sister, Karen, is a senior at Laguna Beach Inell School. Saddleback College oftlclals said that the youn& man had planned to play for b.1a father next year. He was a business major at the college, played soccer, and wu elected student body vice presi· dent earlier this fear. William 1telly. associate dean for student affairs knew Swear· ingen all his life. ''I've )cnown him for 19 yean hke he was a family member. It was certainly a great deal more than the loss of a student body vice president." Kelly and Ken Swearingen wer& in tbe service together. Crasla 1'icti• Aide.d Par,med.ics work on injured Tustin resi· dent Gregory Oliver Hampton following a 4:15 p.m. crash Monday at Via Fabricante a nd Obrero. Drive irt Mission Viejo. Hampton•s motorcy.cle colllded with car. The victim was reported in satisfactory condition today at Saddleback Community Hospital. TeS ts Sa id 'Un e thical'· Students Being 'Prepped' for State Exams? Carmine Berar<J.lnelU waa cbareed In an admlnlatraUve complaint with burying as many as 40 infant.a in oae casket. '?be complaint allO said that on ai least 30 occasiQlls h8burled two caskets ln single gravesites at three New Jersey cemeteries. BerardlnelJi director of the Berardinelli Fune"'t l{omeo, la • the second Newark mortldan to be accused of performing mus burials of residents too poor to pay for their funerals. The 30-count complaint filed to- day by the state Board of Mortuary Science ls the first step toward revocatlon of Berardinelli '1 mortfclan's license ln New JQrsey. No criminal charges were nted. Fro• Page A J BOND ••• sue requlres two lhirda voter ap- prov al to pass. The lease·purchase, agreement would have required only a Sim· pie majority support. . FromPageAJ A charge of unethical tesUng procedures was levied against the Capistrano UnUied School District Monday by a Dana Hills High School aea.ior, who satd stU· dents are being "prepped" for standardized st.ate testa booklet to review before you lake the test," said Kremblas. "You have been drivlnc for five years, and you know to io on the areen and atop on the red, but you re- view anyway. offer whole courses to prepare seniors for the tests. Capistrano Unlfied is very "low key" by comparison, be said. School district officials have estimated Capistrano Unllled's student enrollment, currenUy at 16,000, will increaese by 8,000 new studenta in the next five years. District schools are cur· rently at or beyond capacity, they aald. • PASSION TOLD ••• ·'These standardized tests have been used to compare stu· dent achievement school by school and district by district," Greg Dempster of San Juan Capistrano told Capistrano Unified trust.eta ''The tests are designed to measure reading, writing and math skills de· veloped throughout a school career public could learn the truth. "I have been played up as a very wicked and perverted woman," said Miss McKinney, leaning forward in the dock. "1t 1s not true." Readina from a folder of white paper covered in handwritten notes, the doctor's daughter and one·lime model said she haJ done voluntary work with deaf children and has produced a television documentary on drug addicts. She said after she became in· ~~ested in the Mormon Church, because of a Mormon family she knew with 10 children which "had love and lauehter," she enrolled at Brigham Young Ohiversity in Utah, where she met Anderson. "My standards were quite hi'Jh." Miss McKinney told the court. ''I had had problems ln the past with boys who constantly tried to take my virtue. I don't smoke or drink or use drugs. I was looking for a boy who could read the Bible wilh me and have a tam Uy with me." But Miss McKinney said she became disillusioned at the uni· versity. "I was the ideal modern girl at BYU. I wanted a temple mar· riage -a marriage for eternity." She said her female col- I~agues, however, "drank and had pictures of nude boys on the wall. I didn't expect this at all. They were wolves. I was in a st~te of cultural shock. 1 prayed for a very special boy who would come into my Ute and that is where Kirk comes in." She sald she met Anderson in July 1975 in Provo, Utah, because she bad a sports car and he want· e'1 to drive lt. 1'We stayed toaether all nieht," said Mias McKinney. "We found we had a lot in eon\· mon. He was willing to talk with me about the church but he also began talkinJ of love lllld mar· riage lmmedtat.ety. "J would Uke Lo say he did not propose marria1e to the car -he plfoposed marrt11e to me,•' she t~ld the hushed, packed c urtroom. She said the couple evec cbole. ~mes for their future cblldren d when she uked Anderaoa hether he could 1upport .ber. .. DAILY PILOT she quo(ed him as responding: "Honey, I would work five jobs to support you." "To a womah this means something," the petite defendant said softly. ''These are pretty heavy promises." She said the most important commitment she made to An· derson was to give him ber , virtue. ••Preparation ls supposedly not effective -lo which case it's a waste of time," he said. "In any case, there is a question whet.her il is ethical to pull kids out of clan for two days' tutoring for the tests." Recalling Andenson 's earlier testimony at the bearing, Misa McKinney said: "Klrk tries to say I tempted him. He told Epsom police I waa wearing a skin tight leopard's skin jull)p. suit I had black jeans with a puffy-sleeved top, which bas about as much sex appeal as a potato sack. "Any physical desire I fell was an indirect result of the great spiritual and mental love I had for him, a love he encouraged," she added. "I cannot say I ever got any pleasure out of sexual relations with Kirk. I was too buay trying to satisfy him." May's attorney Robert An· drews said his client dld not believe Andenon 's detenUon was a kidnap, but rather "a reacue from an oppressive and tyran· organization" -the Mormon church -and that it was necessary for Anderson:,S good - and hi.a life. Miss McKinney traced . An· derson to England throueh private detectives and she and May ere charged with taking him to a lonely cottage near Okehampton in Devon, a county in southwest England. Anderson testified he was eventually shackled to a double bed wlth a 10-fool chain and forced to have intercourse three times with Miu McKinney ·before be eventually bargained for his telease alter three daya by promi.slng to marry her. '1At timea you may have thought in the last three days there wu an air of unreality in the court in that it alm°'t seemed to be a local American domestic situation," defense attorney El· grod told the maglat.ratea. 'Tbia muat be the most amalln• non· kidnap story one ha. he.rd for manyyean." F,...PageAJ HERO ••• Dana Hills principal James Kremblas denied today that seniors al I.be school are bemg ''prepped" for the tests, which he said is the "Survey or Basic Skills," a California assessment program "Ir you've had a driver's license for five years and you need to renew It, you pick up a Fro.Page Al FUTUR E ••• the state's share of conatrucUon costs increases. Last. year, the state's share of the district's building costs was about nine percent, said Dr. · Edward Hart, assistant superin· lendent for general development. . Buthisyear,becauseoflncreased enrollments, the state's share h&S been rai.sed to23percent, he said. Under the state's "crazy formula," Lombardi said, thedi.s· trict may receive from 40 to 50 percent oC its construction costs from t.beatateinlhefuture. The superintendent said be did not consider the state fundln& in his infiatlon projections because "I'm presentJnitheworst." • Larry Taylor, board president, asked if it wouldn't be better for the dlstrlct to pass a bond election and speed up the builalng Pn>-~ram to avoid some of the bifla- tlonary costs. Noting that bonds require in· terest trustee Norrlsa Brandt. saldl 11You probably 1Ull have to pa)I n the final analysis." Lombardi added that ac· celeratln1 the bulldine prb· gram would not aecelerate the state aide pro1ram. Hart told trustees that~ accord· inc t.o staba fonnulu, t.he eon~ diJtrlct cW'?enU~ la abOtrt to~ cent '"underbull . "A.Iler the~ trict bullda the ll'lt pbue of ti. new non.bem campu1 a.nd • $S.5 mUlloo cluarooin bu.Udlq OD UM main ~ampm\. be1ald."U probably .•Wl wW tie unaerbuilt. . , Tbo ed.mlnatrator aaid lb.ii la because Saddlebatk ntollment la lncreutni wblle other districts 1n the state are loalnutuden~. ' .. Jt 's the same with the atan· dardized t.esta," he said. "Tb.la ts a test of skills studenta have picked up all afong the way - certainly by ninth or 10th grade. rwo years later. as seolors, they are tested In skllls they know, but perhaps need lo brush up. That's all we're doing in offering them a refresher on spelling, sentence usage, thatkindofthing." · Kremblas said other districts Seniors are excused from two class periods of "American Gov· ernment" to review before the test; the principal said. Serllors not ~aklng the go.,ernment course are Q8ked to take the lOO·minute review during a free period. . "I met with Greg this morning, and he said he didn't realize cer· lain things," said Kremblas. "H~ agreed that 'prep' wasn't the right word to use." Two previous bond elections have won simple majority IUP· port, but not the two thlrda re· quired to pass .. The current $49 mllllon bond measure, lf approved, would meet district buildina needs for the next five years, Thom.sley said. Fro• Page Al ff e emphasized Ulat bonds, if approved in March, could be sold only as the district's student enrollment increases. U students don't move in as exl>t(!t.ed, the diltrict would not qua1Uy to sell NOVEL WRI'ITEN •.• bonds, heaald. · Paasing the bond measure will nol increase the current SO-Cent tax rate, said Tbormley. Instead, real," Mrs. Wingo explained. "When you lint write it all down it com es out so choppy. "We rewrote it so often I was :;ick or it.'" And there were spellinl prob- lems. "Our spelling was so bad there were times we couldn't rind words in the dictionary," Mrs. Wingo recalled lau1hin1ly. The couple peniated and rinal· ly produced a manuacrtpt. Then. the long search for a publisher began. "We sent the manuscript to 12 p.1,1blishen," Mrs. Wingo aald. ''About hall ol lhem were saying to return the book next year. They said they already had all their tiUes for lh1I year." "We were gettinr pretty dis· couraged," her husband re· called. "We finally found a publisher in Fallbrook who aaJd the book was sellable but too ris· que for him." • Finally, the couple's novel was accepted by ExpoaiUon Preaa ol New York. They didn't realize the extent of their accompli.sb· ment until they tourecl the preu back east. " "We went back to New York and toured tbe plant," Wingo ex· plained. "They have a whole warehouse of Manuscripts theyrve turned down." But the Wingos' novel -pat- terned after the experiences or one of captain Wingo's fellow Air California pilots-was accepted. While the couple has scheduled an autographing session Dec. 17 at 8 . Dalton /Pickwick Booksellers in South Coast Plaza, neither is predicting instant suc· cess for their first writing en· deavor. "I think everyone who writ.es a book hopes it will become a best- seller," Wingo admitted. "Un· less it's a t.cemendous best seller you don't make much money and mostly it's authors with a name whomakeU. "But authors do have sometblng that's almost Im· mortal," be continued. "How many people actually do get a book-published." U.N. Bid Killed UNITED NATIONS (AP) ..:... A coaUUoD of Communist, Arab and African nation.a kllled a res· olutlon Monday callinr for ap- pointment of a U.N. high com· missioner for human rights. it will extend the period ol oblll•· .. lion, 1olhe bonds wUl not beJ>aid off101oon. "Paaslne this hood measure will mean that studenta usinc the schools now will pay for lbem," said Westberg. Tbe scope of school building proposed by district ad· mtnistrators, if the bond measure is approved by voters, includes: -Capistrano Valley HiCh School additions t.o double capacity from 1,200 to. 2,400 stu- dents at the Mission Viejo school. -San Clemente Hip Sc~ addilJons to increue eapaclb' by 600 1lu4ents, to a total of 2,400 students. -Forty portable classrooms to be installed at district hieb schools. -Thirty portable claurooms for dlstrict elementary schools. -Purchase of a f9u.r1h ~ school site, this one in Mi.aaioo Viejo. -Con1tructlon of a fourth junior high school. Lo be locaied. in Mlaaioo Viejo. -Conatnactlon of ~ new elementary acbooll. -Construction of a Dana Bills High School stadium. WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS-- THE RESULT~ SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. Asshown- 18 Karat Gold Cube Cluster Ring with · diamonds. 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GM meana 1enttally maplffcent wbft apl>Uld to the eca11omlc outlook. ''Theret. no doubt that the U.S. economy ud the au&omobllt 1DdU1lr)t an lu a dynasnlc pu1od," ooe olfielal report 1tale1. · Dl'NAMlCf BtJT ISN'T TUB autc>..,otiv, tndutry -bara1aed by aJI 1ort.1 of 1eemln1ly ihlW'IDou.ntabl• prob- lemaf Jan't the economlc upansioo a eh.tty old creature trembU.,aloatonarthrtUciolnts? ~ . JUJt • tn day• a10. Thomu A. Murphy, the GM chairman. U.ued a yeare.octatatement tb•t atated (laUy: "General Mo&on. u weJl as tbe automoblle industry 1n the United Statei, in calendar year 1t78, wUl tel reeordJ surpustn.a the marks now beint posi.d ln 1977." ... Murphy is malting a tradition or 1uch 1tatement.s. He 11 in effect saytng that we must remain aware or the problems but pot overlook what is fiilbt with the economy. He 1ald the same thin11Jaatyear, and belor• too. To llluatrate, In Murphy's word.a : '"WE OONTINllE TO BE DEEPLY concerned about the unemployment coet111• ·rate •.• " but we should also note that ''the percent ot the workln' age poj>ulaUon that bolds Jobs also approximates the hiahat level ill peacetime b.lltory. '' And t.o dt01omtrate fW1belo: "We are aware that many uncertalntlea about national economic policy c:wrenUy cloud the ouUoo« for 1978 and have the potential for lmpalriQg bUBt.ntss and consumer confidence. Wt runatn conlldenl, howeYu.. that these un- .certalnUet will be ~ved by soundly baaed programs 1n the national in· tereft," ?be.re ls a good chance that Murphy and GM will say I.be aame tbJnp next year too. At any rate, the pn>epect la there. An official GM report states "General Motors la confident about 1178 and the years beyond.•' Propaganda lD the punult of sell· . fnterest, aay the c.YUlca. What cboice bu MU• ., • company~ GM 'a alze but to promote 1~ news about the economy. Bad new undermlHI b\lfer confidence; good news sells can. TllERE'S ILUDLY ANY PURPOSE ln deulnc the likllbood that thiJ la an inered.l.eot ln the GM recipe. Wb.y. oae of lta former chairmen once stated publicly that u GM &ot• 10 goelS thenaUoo. But GM. ls allo 1>uttin1 ita money up, and that you muat res peel . Said Murphy: "'~neral Motors again will maJte m.Sor • ~apilal ~<Utu:res next year. In 1977, GM '• capltal apend· lng, inclUd.ln& special toola, wiU aure1ate CU billion. moce than 50 percent above last year's near record. ''For ms and 1979, we aped our. apendlne lor the ex- p,nsion and modernilat.loo d our facWUes to be at a oom· p~rably h1gb level." · MATCll '""T AGAINST 'l1IE besttucy of some other concerns. Industry 'a caplW 1pencttn1 levels have "°"' a major di.sappolDtment tor two 31ears. Um:atainty ii tbo ex· plana.Uoa oven .. It can alwQJ be Yled: tb ,tut• La always uncerlabs. t Even ao, you'd never euess it ~· the to!Jo ot the chairman'sremarka. In SlUJlllllU')': "The balanced economic expanaloo dur· tnc 1971 prQvid .. • &ood fcMµidation for •uatalnable arowth in lheyears ahelld." How odd those words! So mao,y j>eQple UUnk the 4lUto ln· duatry has bad a terrJ.ble Ume of It. tliat the economy bu been dlsappotnl"11. tbat tbo economic tO\UMlaUon ls qulver- lnf, that the economic road ahead ls mbiecf, and that maybe amUlng ln ~bllc is unethical. But its all OK. It's perfectbr aedptable to bo op. tlmlstlc. And It appean to pay off as welL • Bank F ete S6t , At Lake Forest